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Friedrichs, Jörg – Journal of Education Policy, 2023
This article examines ethnic segregation in schools as a field where policy inaction, or non-decision making, is rife. A theoretical framework rooted in historical institutionalism and combining critical junctures with path dependencies enables the study of non-decision making and policy inaction. Moving from non-decision making as a general…
Descriptors: School Segregation, Ethnicity, Decision Making, Educational Policy
Potter, Halley – Century Foundation, 2019
In 2014, a study by the Civil Rights Project at UCLA found that New York State had the most segregated schools in the country, more segregated than the school systems in the deep south. In recent years, however, attention to and action on school integration in New York has grown. Through groups such as Teens Take Charge, IntegrateNYC, and the…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, School Segregation, School Desegregation, School Districts
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Brewer, T. Jameson; Lubienski, Christopher – National Education Policy Center, 2017
A new report by the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), "Differences by Design?," compares differences in approaches and demographics between and among charter school models and local "traditional public schools." Using three national data sets, the report effectively captures the national universe of charter schools. It…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Student Characteristics, Models, School Segregation
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Flint, John – Policy Futures in Education, 2012
This article explores the role of state-funded Catholic schools in debates about the causes and manifestations of sectarianism in Scotland. It suggests that debates between proponents and opponents of state-funded Catholic schools (and indeed faith schools more generally) have been largely aspatial, focusing on the teaching ethos within…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Foreign Countries, Catholic Schools, Catholics
Rotberg, Iris C. – Phi Delta Kappan, 2014
This article examines a wide array of research on the link between school choice programs and student segregation and draws implications for the Obama Administration's policy promoting the national expansion of charter schools. The research demonstrates how the proliferation of charter schools risks increasing current levels of segregation…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, School Segregation, School Choice, Educational Policy
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Gooden, Mark A.; Thompson Dorsey, Dana N. – Educational Administration Quarterly, 2014
Background: In 1954, the "Brown v. Board of Education" case involved four states and their school segregation laws and policies. During that period, de jure and de facto segregation were a way of life in America. Sixty years later, as most schools across the country have resegregated, the authors ask the question of whether we should be…
Descriptors: School Segregation, Housing, Advantaged, Court Litigation
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Bartholo, Tiago Lisboa – Journal of School Choice, 2013
Recent research in Rio de Janeiro public schools has brought to light a "Hidden Quasi-Market" that combines purported freedom of choice for parents with school control over their pupil intake. The article analyzes patterns of segregation among schools, from 2004 to 2010, according to three indicators of potentially disadvantaged pupils:…
Descriptors: School Segregation, Foreign Countries, School Choice, Student Characteristics
Colorado Children's Campaign, 2017
This year's KIDS COUNT report delves into disparities in child well-being based on race and ethnicity in an effort to shine a light on issues where Colorado can and must do better at creating equitable opportunities for children. The disparities seen in many areas of child well-being did not just happen by coincidence; nor are they the result of…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Well Being, Racial Differences, Ethnicity
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Webb, P. Taylor; Gulson, Kalervo N. – Journal of Pedagogy, 2011
We argue that neo-liberal educational policy has emerged as a proto-fascist governmentality. This contemporary technology relies on State racisms and racial orderings manifested from earlier liberal and neo-liberal practices of biopower. As a proto-fascist technology, education policy, and school choice policies in particular, operate within a…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Educational Policy, Racial Bias, School Choice
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Nedelcu, Anca; Iucu, Romita; Ciolan, Lucian – European Education, 2011
This article analyzes qualitative data obtained from focus groups with students learning in schools with a majority and minority language of instruction from Estonia, Latvia, Romania, and Slovakia. The focus groups were developed within the framework of the project "Divided Education, Divided Citizens?" conducted by the Network of…
Descriptors: Citizenship, Student Attitudes, Focus Groups, Language of Instruction
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Wells, Ryan – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2009
Immigration in the U.S. continues to increase and to become increasingly diverse. About 20% of U.S. students are children of immigrants. This phenomenon is occurring as schools are racially and ethnically resegregating even as race-based decision making for K-12 schooling has been severely limited. This study examines school segregation for…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, School Segregation, Academic Achievement, Immigration
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Gorard, Stephen; Cheng, Shou Chen – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2011
Previous international work has shown that clustering pupils with similar characteristics in particular schools yields no clear academic benefit, and can be disadvantageous both socially and personally. Understanding how and why this clustering happens, and how it may be reduced, is therefore important for policy. Yet previous work has tended to…
Descriptors: School Segregation, Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries, Socioeconomic Background
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Valiente, Oscar; Rambla, Xavier – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2009
This study estimates the trends of school segregation in Catalonia (Spain) between 2001 and 2006. Currently, new immigration has reopened the debate about the "Other Catalans" triggered by concern with the integration of the incoming population. An "intersectional approach" to social divisions suggests that class and ethnic…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, Public Schools, Private Schools, School Segregation
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Lee, Carol D. – Review of Research in Education, 2009
In this chapter, the author offers a historical overview of constructions of risk in the context of schooling for nondominant groups and how communities have organized schooling in ways that support resiliency in the face of these risks. She discusses an expansive orientation to understanding how people learn to respond to risks that is rooted in…
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Outcomes of Education, Risk, Educational Change
Center for Child and Family Policy, Duke University (NJ1), 2009
The Duke University School Research Partnership (SRP) Office was developed with support from the Office of the Provost and the Center for Child and Family Policy. Begun in 2006 as the Duke Office for Research in Schools (DORIS), the SRP Office is an integral part of the work of the Center for Child and Family Policy. The SRP Office facilitates…
Descriptors: Laboratory Schools, Teacher Characteristics, College School Cooperation, Educational Policy
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