Title: Inequality within Schools: Ability Grouping and Tracking
1Inequality within Schools Ability Grouping and
Tracking
- Sociology 20228
- September 5,2004
2How Does the Allocation System in America Work in
Practice?
Both Between School and Within School Differences
LEARNING OPPOR-TUNITIES
?
?
?
?
SOCIAL DESTI-NATIONS
EDUCA-TIONAL SUCCESS
?
?
?
SOCIAL ORIGINS
EFFORT
?
?
?
ACADEMIC ABILITY
?
3The Role of Tracking in Americas Allocation
System
How is tracking related to students academic
experiences?
To what extent is grouping a source of inequality
in outcomes?
LEARNING OPPOR-TUNITIES
?
?
?
?
SOCIAL DESTI-NATIONS
EDUCA-TIONAL SUCCESS
?
?
?
SOCIAL ORIGINS
EFFORT
?
?
?
ACADEMIC ABILITY
?
What are the relative importance of ability and
social origins in shaping track placement?
4Grouping Practices in Schools
- Elementary Schools
- ABILITY GROUPING WITHIN CLASSES (e.g., Reading
groups) - ABILITY GROUPING ACROSS CLASSES (e.g.,
pullouts) - Middle Schools
- TRACKS Students grouped together in several
classes across academic subjects with differing
levels of academic content/rigor
5Grouping Practices in Schools
- High School
- COURSE TAKING PATTERNS
- Different types of classes within a given subject
(e.g., Honors, Advanced Placement, College Prep,
Remedial, General) - Advanced Classes (e.g., Calculus, Physics, Fourth
Year English, Third Year Language) that are not
required - The label of Track is difficult to apply to the
High School curriculum students course taking
experiences may vary across subjects (e.g.,
high in math, but regular or low English).
6Rationale of Ability Grouping and Tracking
- Intended to address a fundamental problem of
schooling - Students do not come to school with the same
level of knowledge and/or ability. - Key Assumption Teachers are more effective at
instructing students when the level of knowledge
and/or ability in a class is homogeneous.
7What is Academic Ability?
- Can the student exhibit mastery over the
material? - Ex Can the student learn calculus? Can the
student derive proofs on their own? - How much time and effort is necessary for a given
student to exhibit mastery over the material? - Ex How long does it take the student to learn
calculus? How much attention from the teacher is
needed to learn calculus?
8Research on Academic Ability
- Do most students have the ability to master the
K-12 curriculum? - Research says, YES.
- Do most students require the same inputs (time,
effort, instruction) to learn the same material? - Research says, NO.
- KEY POINT Most students can learn the material,
but the inputs required differ markedly depending
on the student.
9Ability vs. Knowledge
- KEY DIFFERENCE
- ABILITY suggests a capacity for learning
something. - LEVEL OF KNOWLEDGE (Achievement) indicates
whether one has actually learned the material. - It is possible to lack knowledge in a given
area but to still possess an ability to learn it.
10How Do Schools Assess Student Ability?
- Intelligence Tests
- Have Grown Less Popular over Time
- Problems
- Persistent Group Differences in Tests are Likely
NOT Due to Ability Rather they are due to
constricted Opportunities and Caste Status - Group Differences in Tests Have and Could Be
Deemed Discriminatory in Court - IQ tests measure something but is it ability?
(E.g., The Flynn Effect)
11How Do Schools Assess Student Ability?
- Prior Test Scores, Prior Grades
- Most Commonly Used Indicators of Ability
- Problems
- Content based assessments that are dependent on
(1) prior learning opportunities (both inside and
outside schools), (2) prior student effort, and
(3) students academic ability. - Conflates the issues of how much students know
with their ability to know it.
12How Do Schools Assess Student Ability?
- Teacher Recommendations
- Often used alongside grades and test scores
- Problems
- Teachers can be biased in their assessments
(e.g., same behavior or performance may be seen
differently depending on ascriptive
characteristics). - Teachers may confuse ability with effort or
help from home.
13Assessing Ability
- Is it possible or necessary to assess student
ability when organizing students for instruction? - It is possible to assess some aspects of ability
(what inputs are needed) but not all (capacity). - It is not necessary but it COULD be helpful.
14Sorting by Tracks
All of the Race/Ethnicity Relationship and much
of the SES relationship is INDIRECT
Race/Ethnicity
Test Scores and/or Grades
Track Placement
Socioeconomic Status
A Direct Effect of SES on Track Placement Remains
Even after Controlling for Academic Performance
15Sorting by Tracks
- If test scores and grades are the primary means
of sorting students into tracks, can we conclude
that the tracking system is meritocratic? - Equal opportunities, but unequal outcomes ?
Consistent with MERITOCRATIC MODEL
16Sorting by Tracks
- KEY PROBLEM
- Where do inequalities in prior achievement come
from? - UNEQUAL OPPORTUNITIES, ABILITY, OR EFFORT?
- If UNEQUAL OPPORTUNITIES are to blame, then the
argument for MERITOCRATIC allocation is weakened.
17Sorting by Tracks
- RACIAL AND SOCIOECONOMIC SEGREGATION AT THE
CLASSROOM LEVEL IF WE SORT ON THE BASIS OF
ACHIEVEMENT - Is this acceptable, or should we take concerns
about diversity into account when sorting
students? - ?Should we judge a sorting regime on the basis of
the process, the outcomes, or a mix of both?
18Sorting by Tracks
- What role should choice students own
preferences play in assigning students to
ability groups, tracks, and/or courses? - Does increased choice by students have
implications for inequality of opportunities (and
perhaps outcomes)?
19How Does Tracking Affect Learning Opportunities?
- CURRICULUM DIFFERENTIATION
- ? Instructional Time Total time, Time on
task, homework time - ? Content Coverage What is Covered? How Much
is Covered? - ? Instructional Quality What types of skills
are developed? (Writing, Creativity, Problem
solving?) More engaging pedagogy, classroom
climate? - ? Teacher Quality Level of experience,
qualifications, teaching in-field, etc.
20Track Mobility
- Can students move from one track to another?
- Yes, there is a good deal of track mobility.
- BUT . . .
- There is more movement downward (from higher to
lower tracks) than upward.
21Track Mobility
- TOURNAMENT MOBILITY in tracking
- Student compete for positions at each level
- Winners continue in their track position
- Losers are eliminated from the tournament and
do not have the opportunity to move back up
22How Homogeneous are Tracks with Regard to Prior
Achievement?
- There is a good deal of overlap in prior
achievement across tracks because - Non-academic factors play too large a role in
placing students in tracks. - (E.g., Favoritism based on social class,
scheduling constraints, scarce resources, etc.)
23How Homogeneous are Tracks with Regard to Prior
Achievement?
In Practice
In Theory
HI
PRIOR ACHIEVE-MENT
LOW
HIGH
HIGH
LOW
MED
MED
LOW
TRACK
24What Effect Does Tracking Have on Student
Outcomes?
- Achievement gains are roughly equal for students
in tracked and untracked schools - BUT
- The distribution of gains differs in important
ways in tracked and untracked school.
25What Effect Does Tracking Have on Student
Outcomes?
UNTRACKED
HI
HIGH
TRACKED
MED
ACHIEVE-MENT
LOW
LOW
TIME 2
TIME 1
26What Effect Does Tracking Have on Student
Outcomes?
- High achievers learn more in a tracked system
than an untracked system. - Middle achievers learn about the same in tracked
and untracked classes. - Low achievers learn more in an untracked system
than in a tracked system.
27Why Does Ability Grouping/Tracking Affect the
Distribution of Achievement ?
- THREE THEORIES ABOUT THE SOURCE OF EFFECTS
- Instructional
- Social
- Institutional
28Why Does Ability Grouping/Tracking Affect the
Distribution of Achievement ?
- INSTRUCTIONAL EFFECTS
- Group placements influences the quantity,
quality, and pace of instruction and hence
learning. - WELL-SUPPORTED BY RESEARCH
29Why Does Ability Grouping/Tracking Affect the
Distribution of Achievement ?
- SOCIAL EFFECTS
- Ability groups constitute social settings in
which individual children evaluate their
performance and internalize academic norms ?
Forms expectations for academic performance. - EITHER WEAK OR NO EVIDENCE
30Why Does Ability Grouping/Tracking Affect the
Distribution of Achievement ?
- INSTITUTIONAL EFFECTS
- Group placements symbolize certain shared
understandings of the qualities and capacities of
group members (independent of actual skills) and
affect how teacher and parent expectations for
performance. - SOME EVIDENCE, BUT IT IS ONLY SUGGESTIVE
31Student Effort and Tracking
- STUDENT EFFORT
- Higher track students exert more effort than
comparable students in low track classes. - Effort is a strong predictor of achievement.
- Differences in effort across tracks explain only
a modest portion of track differences in learning.