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Inequality within Schools: Ability Grouping and Tracking

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Inequality within Schools: Ability Grouping and Tracking Sociology 20228 September 5,2004 How Does the Allocation System in America Work in Practice? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Inequality within Schools: Ability Grouping and Tracking


1
Inequality within Schools Ability Grouping and
Tracking
  • Sociology 20228
  • September 5,2004

2
How 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
?
3
The 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?
4
Grouping 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

5
Grouping 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).

6
Rationale 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.

7
What 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?

8
Research 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.

9
Ability 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.

10
How 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)

11
How 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.

12
How 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.

13
Assessing 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.

14
Sorting 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
15
Sorting 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

16
Sorting 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.

17
Sorting 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?

18
Sorting 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)?

19
How 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.

20
Track 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.

21
Track 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

22
How 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.)

23
How Homogeneous are Tracks with Regard to Prior
Achievement?
In Practice
In Theory
HI
PRIOR ACHIEVE-MENT
LOW
HIGH
HIGH
LOW
MED
MED
LOW
TRACK
24
What 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.

25
What Effect Does Tracking Have on Student
Outcomes?
UNTRACKED
HI
HIGH
TRACKED
MED
ACHIEVE-MENT
LOW
LOW
TIME 2
TIME 1
26
What 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.

27
Why Does Ability Grouping/Tracking Affect the
Distribution of Achievement ?
  • THREE THEORIES ABOUT THE SOURCE OF EFFECTS
  • Instructional
  • Social
  • Institutional

28
Why 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

29
Why 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

30
Why 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

31
Student 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.
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