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School Segregation and Racial Academic Achievement Gaps

Item

Title
School Segregation and Racial Academic Achievement Gaps
Abstract/Description
Although it is clear that racial segregation is linked to academic achievement gaps, the mechanisms underlying this link have been debated since James Coleman published his eponymous 1966 report. In this paper, I examine sixteen distinct measures of segregation to determine which is most strongly associated with academic achievement gaps. I find clear evidence that one aspect of segregation in particular—the disparity in average school poverty rates between white and black students’ schools—is consistently the single most powerful correlate of achievement gaps, a pattern that holds in both bivariate and multivariate analyses. This implies that high-poverty schools are, on average, much less effective than lower-poverty schools and suggests that strategies that reduce the differential exposure of black, Hispanic, and white students to poor schoolmates may lead to meaningful reductions in academic achievement gaps.
Author/creator
Date
2016
In publication
RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences
Volume
2
Issue
5
Pages
34-57
Resource type
en
Resource status/form
en
Scholarship genre
en
Language
en
Open access/full-text available
en Yes
Peer reviewed
en Yes
ISSN
2377-8253, 2377-8261
Citation
Reardon, S. F. (2016). School Segregation and Racial Academic Achievement Gaps. RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 2(5), 34–57. https://doi.org/10.7758/RSF.2016.2.5.03
Rights
Copyright © 2016 by Russell Sage Foundation. All rights reserved.

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