Title: Socioeconomic School Integration
1Socioeconomic School Integration
- Race, Class and Education Gaining New Insights
- Center for Children and Childhood Studies
- Rutgers University Camden Campus
- May 5, 2006
2Districts Pursuing Socioeconomic Integration
- Wake County, (Raleigh) North Carolina. No
school should have more than 40 of students
eligible for free or reduced price lunch or 25
performing below grade level. - Cambridge, Massachusetts. All schools should
fall within or 10 percentage points of
district average for free and reduced price lunch
(40). - La Crosse, Wisconsin. All schools should have
between 15 and 45 of students eligible for free
lunch.
3Other Districts Pursuing Socioeconomic Integration
- Manchester, CT Maplewood, NJ Coweta County, GA
St. Lucie County, FL, San Francisco, CA
Greenville, SC Brandywine, DE Rochester, NY
San Jose, CA. - 20,000 students in 1999. Roughly 500,000
students today.
4Percentage of Schools that are Consistently High
Performing, by Socioeconomic Status
5Student's NAEP Math Scores, by Type of School
6David Rusk Study of Madison-Dane County, WI (2002)
- Among fourth grade students
- For every 1 percent increase in middle-class
classmates, low income students improved 0.64
percentage point in reading and 0.72 percentage
point in math. - Any given low income student attending an 85
middle class school rather than a 45 middle
class school saw a 20 to 32 percentage point
improvement in that low-income pupils test
scores.
7Ten Factors that Make for Good Schools
- An adequate financial base (as measured against
student needs) to provide small class size,
modern equipment, and the like. Middle income
schools, on average, spend as much as twice what
low income schools spend per pupil. All Together
Now (Brookings Press, 2001) p.64
8Ten Factors that Make for Good Schools
- A place where money is spent wisely, on the
classroom rather than on bureaucracy. In middle
class areas, pressure is less intense to make
education a jobs program, so bureaucracies are
less likely to be bloated. 65-66
9Ten Factors that Make for Good Schools
- An orderly environment. Middle class schools
report disorder problems half as often as low
income schools. 58
10Ten Factors that Make for Good Schools
- A stable student and teacher population. Middle
class schools see half as much student mobility
as higher poverty schools, and teacher mobility
is one-fourth as high. 60,68
11Ten Factors that Make for Good Schools
- A good principal and well-qualified teachers
trained in the subject they are teaching.
Teachers in middle class schools are more likely
to be licensed, less likely to teach out of their
field of expertise, less likely to have low
teacher test scores, less likely to be
inexperienced, and more likely to have greater
formal education. Even when paid comparable
salaries, teachers consider it a promotion to
move from poor to middle class schools, and the
best teachers usually transfer into middle income
schools at the first opportunity. 67-71
12Ten Factors that Make for Good Schools
- A meaty curriculum and high expectations.
Curriculum in middle class schools is more
challenging and expectations are higher. The
grade of C in a middle income school is the same
as a grade of A in low income schools, as
measured by standardized tests results. Middle
class schools are more likely to offer AP classes
and high level math. 72-74
13Ten Factors that Make for Good Schools
- Active parental involvement. In middle class
schools, parents are four times as likely to be
members of the PTA and much more likely to
participate in fundraising. 62-64
14Ten Factors that Make for Good Schools
- Motivated peers who value achievement and
encourage it among classmates. Peers in middle
income schools are more academically engaged,
more likely to do homework, less likely to watch
TV, less likely to cut class and more likely to
graduate all of which have been found to
influence the behavior of classmates. 51-8
15Ten Factors that Make for Good Schools
- High achieving peers, whose knowledge is shared
informally with classmates all day long. In
middle class schools, peers come to schools with
twice the vocabulary of lower income children, so
any given child is more likely to expand his
vocabulary through informal interaction. p. 50
16Ten Factors that Make for Good Schools
- Well connected peers who will help provide access
to jobs down the line. Children attending middle
class schools are given access to informal
connections that serve children well in finding
jobs after graduation. 61
17Why the Shift from Race to Class?
- Legal clouds hanging over the use of race in
student assignment. (Alito) Class mixing has a
positive racial dividend. - Academic achievement more directly related to
economic mix in a school than the racial mix.
18Importance of Class
- Research Academic benefits of integration not
from proximity to whiteness but middle-class
environment - Racial Desegregation in Charlotte vs. Boston
- Behaviors Associated with Class more than Race
Discipline problems acting white actually a
class phenomenon parental involvement etc.
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202004-2005 North Carolina High School End of
Course Exams Composite
21 Socioeconomic Integration Doesnt Hurt
Middle-Class
- Numbers Matter. Numerical majority sets the
tone. - Middle-Class children on average are less
sensitive to changes in school environment than
low-income students. - Social and moral benefits of diversity
22How to Pursue Socioeconomic Integration
- Redrawing school boundaries
- Siting new schools in economically mixed areas
- Magnet schools
- Controlled Public School Choice
23For More Information
- Richard D. Kahlenberg, All Together Now Creating
Middle Class Schools through Public School Choice
(Brookings Press, 2001 paperback, 2003). - Divided We Fail Coming Together through Public
School Choice Report of The Century Foundation
Task Force on the Common School (Lowell Weicker,
Chair) (Century Foundation Press, 2002).
24Contact Information
- Richard D. Kahlenberg
- Senior Fellow
- The Century Foundation
- 1333 H Street, N.W. 10th Floor
- Washington, D.C. 20005
- kahlenberg_at_tcf.org
- www.equaleducation.org