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Saturday, November 23, 2024

Understanding Segregation and School Choice

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Are school choice programs contributing to segregation in American schools?

The answer is undoubtedly yes, according to a recent research brief published by the National Coalition on School Diversity and written by Casey Cobb, the Raymond Neag Endowed Professor of Educational Policy in UConn’s Neag School of Education.

But so-called “controlled choice” programs that consider a variety of  student and school characteristics and seek to balance school  enrollments by race, wealth, and achievement may offer opportunities to  promote more equitable school environments.

“There’s been a lot of research on the benefits of integrated  schools,” says Cobb, who studies school choice, accountability, school  reform, and educational equity and inequity.

“For one thing, it fosters greater cross-racial understanding,” he  explains. “But we’ve also seen that it improves student learning and  improves the academic achievement and critical thinking skills in  students of all backgrounds.”

On the flip side, he says, are the pronounced negative consequences  of hyper-segregated schools, where concentrations of poverty within  historically minoritized populations – particularly in urban  environments, where school demographics are often reflective of housing  segregation – lead to significant harms to students.

“They are further marginalized, more than they already are,” Cobb  says. “Schools located in high-poverty areas can’t seem to get the  resources that are on par with schools that are located in more affluent  communities. They have more difficulty attracting and retaining high  quality teachers and administrators.”

School choice programs are often touted as a means to addressing  systemic inequities in schools, but in the United States, they largely  operate as unregulated “open enrollment” programs, where students and  their parents are allowed to choose which school they attend. Without  regulation, and without an explicit focus on the goal of better  integrated school environments, segregation becomes more pronounced.

Studies have shown that charter schools, for example – which in an  unregulated system are essentially free market startups – end up more  racially, ethnically, and economically homogenous than the surrounding  traditional public schools.

“I’ve done some of the primary research myself,” says Cobb, “but I’ve  also reviewed dozens and dozens of studies, and the overall conclusion  is that the unregulated programs will exacerbate already existing  stratified systems. It’s not like the systems aren’t stratified to begin  with, but these unregulated programs tend to actually make it worse.”

While there are some instances where states have tried to incentivize  charter schools to consider the racial and economic balance of their  enrollment, it’s not highly enforced, he says. And even regulated  systems still rely on voluntary participation – people applying to  certain schools and then accepting offers and ultimately enrolling.

“The regulations are trying to incentivize and to guard against  further exacerbation of social stratification,” says Cobb. “There are  great challenges, I think, for policymakers, because there’s only so  many levers that they can pull, or have at their disposal, because they  rely on voluntary choice programs to meet their goals.”

Ultimately, controlled choice programs do offer a way to grant  individual school preferences while also honoring policy goals – but  those goals can’t be achieved without targeted focus and explicit  emphasis on breaking the persistent links between segregating housing  and school enrollment.

Original source can be found here.

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