Title: The Effect of Student Mobility on School Achievement
1The Effect of Student Mobility on School
Achievement
- A Study of the South Bend Community School
Corporation
2Part 1 What we know about student mobility from
previous research
- Nick Deprey
- Joseph Ruffini
- Andrew Marchese
3Introduction
- What is student mobility?
- How much school switching goes on?
- Why do students change schools?
- Which students move the most?
- Why school switching matter?
- For students
- For Schools
- What can schools do to reduce student mobility?
To mitigate the consequences of mobility?
4What is Student Mobility?
- Students making non-promotional school changes
- Can occur during the school year or between
school years - Can move to a school in same district or outside
the district - Can occur more than once a year
5How much school switching goes on?
- In 1998, NAEP study showed
- 34 of 4th graders
- 21 of 8th graders
- 10 of 12th graders
- changed schools at least once in previous two
years.
Source Rumberger, 2003
6Which students move the most?
- Among 4th graders, the NAEP study showed that
over a 2 yr period. . . - 45 of Black
- 41 of Hispanic
- 27 of White
- 33 of Asian American
- . . . students changed schools
Source Rumberger, 2003
7Which students move the most?
- Low-income students
- 43 of 4th graders eligible for national school
lunch - Living in single parent, mother-only families
- 40 of all students moving 3 or 4 times over two
years
Sources Rumberger, 2003 Kerbow, 1996.
8Which students move the most?
- by type of school district. . .
- Large, predominantly minority, urban school
districts - 30-40 of students enroll for less than the
school year
Source Rumberger, 2003
9Which students move the most?
- overall. . .
- More students make nonpromotional changes during
their elementary and secondary school careers
than stay in a single elementary, middle, and
high school - Changing school is
- the norm for elementary students
- an exception for high school students
Source Rumberger, 2003
10Why do students change schools?
- Changing residences (70 of moves for 8-12th
graders) - Evictions
- Changes in family composition
- Splits
- marriages
- School orders move for disciplinary reasons
- To experience more diversity
- To avoid problematic environment
- To attend a better school
Source Kerbow, 1996
11Why does Mobility Matter?
- Consequences. ..
- For Students switching schools
- Lower Achievement
- More Behavioral Problems
- Higher Drop-out Rates
- For classrooms
- For students who stay
- For schools
12Lower Achievement for Movers
- On average, changing schools lowered GPA
(measured on a 4.0 scale) by - .163 points for Black students
- .541 points for Hispanic students
- Students who switch schools also were 35 more
likely to have failed a grade
Source Felner, Ginter and Primavera, 1981 The
Journal of the American Medical Association
13Behavioral Problems for Movers
- After controlling for socioeconomic differences,
- 77 of school switchers are reported to have
behavioral problems - Behavioral problems increase with the number of
school changes
Source Tucker, Marx, and Long, 1998 The
Journal of the American Medical Association
14Higher Dropout Rates for Movers
- Students switching schools early are more likely
to drop out before graduating high school - 1 out of every 4 eighth graders switching schools
drops-out
Source Swanson and Schneider, 1999
Rumberger and Larson
15Consequences for Stayers
- The stable core
- percent of students who remain at a school from
one year to the next - In a typical Chicago elementary school, 46 or
students who entered in kindergarten are present
for the first day of 4th grade
Source Kerbow, 1996
16Consequences for Stayers
- Mobility creates Chaos Factor in classrooms
- Instructional routines disrupted
- Pace of instruction slows
- Curriculum design driven by needs of movers
- Administrative resources diverted to
incorporating new students - Teacher morale falls
- Sense of community fractured
- Stayers suffer academically (lower scores)
Source Rumberger, 2003
17Consequences for Schools
- School test scores fall
- Ability to evaluate instructional quality clouded
- Schools held accountable for students who may
have been elsewhere for a significant portion of
the school year
Source Rumberger, 2003
18 What can schools do to reduce student mobility?
- Educate students/parents about the consequences
of moving - Assess past enrollment history to identify
frequent movers and target them - Problem solve so that students can remain
Source Rumberger, 2003
19 What can schools do to reduce student mobility?
- Work with community agencies to reduce need for
residential moves - Review timing of housing subsidy payments
- Work with local
- reality association
- Coordinate foster home placements
- Build school identity and student loyalty
Source Schuler, 1990
20 What can schools do to mitigate the
consequences of mobility?
- Schools and teachers should
- Prepare in advance for new students
- Facilitate transition as soon as new students
arrive - Establish ongoing procedures and practices to
address new students needs
SourceRumberger (2003)
21Bibliography
- Alexander, K., Entwisle, D., Dauber ( 1994).
Children in Motion School Transfers and
Elementary School Performance. Paper presented
at the meeting of the American Sociological
Association, Los Angeles, CA.
- Felner, R., Primavera J., Cauce, A. (1981) .
The Impact of School Transitions A Focus for
Preventive Efforts. American Journal of
Community Psychology, 9, 449-459. - Kerbow, David. (1996) Patterns of Urban Student
Mobility and Local School Reform. Journal of
Education for Students Placed at Risk, I(2),
147-169. - Lash, Andrea and Sandra Kirkpatrick (1990). A
Classroom Perspective on Student Mobility.
Elementary School Journal, 91, 177-191.
22Bibliography, cont.
- Rumberger, R. (2003). The Causes and
Consequences of Student Mobility, Journal of
Negro Education, Vo. 72, No. 1 (Winter),
6-20. - Rumberger R. Larson, K. (1998). Student
Mobility and the Increased Risk of High School
Dropout. American Journal of Education, 107,
1-35. - Schuler,D. (1990). Effects of Family Mobility on
Student Achievement, ERS Spectrum, Vol. 8, No. 4,
17-24. - Swanson, C. Schneider, B. (1999) Students on
the Move Residential and Educational Mobility in
Americas Schools. Sociology of Education, 72,
54-67.
23Bibliography, cont.
- Tucker,Jack, Jonathan Marx, and Larry Long.
(1998) Moving On Residential Mobility and
Childrens School Lives. Sociology of Education,
71, 111-129. - Wood, D., Halfon, N., Scarla, D., Newacheck, P.,
Nessim, S. (1993). The Impact of Family
Relocation on Childrens Growth, Development,
School Function, and Behavior. The Journal of the
American Medical Association, 270, 1334-1338.
24Part 2 Mobility and ISTEP scores across Indiana
- Ben Clarke
- Claire Smither
25Our Project
- Looked at Student Mobility throughout Indiana
- At the Corporation Level (n316)
26Data
- Student Migration
- Over-counting
- Under-counting
- Annual Performance Reports
- Just right
27Equation
- PCTmORe ß0 ß1INTRA ß2INTER ß3ELLpct ß4
ATTNpct ß5STratio ß6SPEDpct ß7ENROLL ß8
ENROLLminPCT ß9FREELUNCHpct ß10PPE ß11metro
ß12town ß13rural e
28Dependent Variables
- (1) PCTmORe, is the percentage of students
passing either the math or English sections - (2) PCTmath, is the percentage of students
passing the math section, independent of their
English score - (3) PCTenglish, is the percentage of students
passing the English section, independent of their
math score - (4) PCTme, is the percentage of students
passing both the math and English sections
29Independent Variables
30Results
31Main Findings
- Excluding the demographic variables, INTRA and
INTER are the largest negative influences of
ISTEP score - INTER and INTRA are significant in 7 out of 8
estimates - ATTN is a big, significant, positive factor in
ISTEP scores
32What does this mean for Indiana?
- For a given corporation, if the INTRA mobility
rate decreases by one percentage point (from 17.4
to 16.4), the ISTEP pass rate should increase by
.84 percentage points (from 60 to 60.84).
33Part 3 Mobility ISTEP scores in the SBCSC
- Cole Davis,
- Karen Stockley,
- Ann Walter
34Mobility
- Two types of school switching
- within a school system (intra)
- into a different school district (inter)
- How does it affect SBCSC?
- Intra 15.0
- Inter 7.7
- Total 22.7
- Adequate Yearly Progress
- http//mustang.doe.state.in.us/AP/buttoncorp.cfm?c
orp7205year2006
35Intra District MobilitySBCSC, 2005-06
Moves between schools involving less than five
students are not recorded
36Intra District Mobility Rates ()SBCSC, 2005-06
Moves between schools involving less than five
students are not recorded
37Mobility Findings
- Primary school students are most likely to switch
schools (1 in 5) - Intermediate students rank second (1 in 6)
- high school students least likely to move (1 in
14)
38Inter District Mobility SBCSC, 2005-06
Moves between schools involving less than ten
students are not recorded
39Intra Inter District Mobility,SBCSC, 2005-06
40Intra vs. Inter District MobilitySBCSC, 2005-06
- Predominance of school switching is internal
- Changes within the district occur almost twice as
often and changes involving schools outside the
district.
41Regression Analysis
- Data Sources
- http//mustang.doe.state.in.us/SAS/sas1.cfmand
http//mustang.doe.state.in.us/SEARCH/snapcorp.cfm
?corp7205 - School Level Data
- 4 years (2004-2007)
- 32 primary schools
42Definition of key variables
- Stability index the average across students of
the portion of the school year each student is
enrolled in a particular school (hypothetical
range is 0 to 100) - ISTEP passing rates for math only and English
only
43ISTEP pass rates in 3rd grade Math vs Stability
Index
44ISTEP pass rates in 3rd grade English vs
Stability Index
45Our Model
- Variables of Interest
- ISTEP pass rates, Stability Index
- Control Variables
- Student variables
- attendance rate, race, percent free lunch,
percent limited English - School Variables
- teacher experience, suspensions, expulsions
46Results
- Stability index is insignificant
- Significant variables
- Percent free lunch
- Dummy variables for 2005, 2006, 2007
- R2 .52 (math) and .56(english)
47Implications
- Cant prove that mobility is significant
- Data limitations
- Problems with mobility measure
- Cannot follow movements of individual students
- Limited to one move per child
- Cannot determine timing of move
- No moves recorded for school when 4 or fewer
children move in or out - Missing important variables
- More years of data needed
48More research is needed
- Focus on individual children, not schools
- Collect and analyze data that correct for
limitations - Identify frequent movers and track their movement
- Estimate the cost of open enrollment for mobile
children - Follow a core of stable students
49Glossary of Variables
50Summary Statistics
51Results Percent passing math
52Results Percent passing English
53Part 4 Proposals for SBCSC
- Sam MacDonald
- Mary Kate Sweeney
54Mobility Focus Group
- Met with curriculum leaders on October 5, 2007
- Shared anecdotes about experiences with mobility
in SBCSC - Made recommendations for dealing with mobility
issues
55Causes of Mobility in South Bend
- Temporary movement to native country
- Eviction
- Family issues
- Change of foster homes
- Move between guardians
- Unhappy custodial agreements
- Family member incarcerated
- New family formation
- Parents are angry at the school
- Possibility that the child may be tested
- Escape from bad neighborhoods
- Move for diversity
- Leaving public school for home school
56Surprises
- No standardized way of changing schools within
the corporation - No standard way of welcoming new students
- Pearly has Resource and Parent Rooms
- Transfer of records is not systematic
- No attempt to educate parents about the costs of
mobility - No systemic recording of mobility
57Recommendations
- Keep child in the same school for at least an
entire school year - Provide options to families to prevent change of
schools - Get the whole community to help
- ie the Mayor Casie Center
- Provide transportation no matter where the
students live
58Casie Center
- Elementary School Truancy Prevention Program
- Work with the schools
- Student tracking
- Folder of information
- Truancy prevention specialist
- 6th grade
- Middle schools
- School Switching
- Testimonies
59Parent Questionnaires
- Aim is to provide the SBCSC with data on mobility
- An addition to the withdraw and registration
paperwork - Parents fill them out when withdrawing and
reenrolling child - Design incorporates information from the focus
group meeting
60Withdrawal Questionnaire
- Track movement within SBCSC and to other school
corporations - Time frame for reenrollment
- Frequency of mobility
- Problems child has experienced due to change of
school - Reasons for withdrawal
- Ways SBCSC can assist the parent
- Desire to stay in current school
- Need for transportation
61Registration Questionnaire
- Childs previous school
- Time lapsed since withdrawal
- Frequency of school changes
- Problems child has experienced due to change of
school - Reason for mobility
- Ways SBCSC can assist the parent
- Desire to stay at previous school
- Need for transportation to previous school
62Information Pamphlet for Parents
- Changing schools?...Some things to think about
63(No Transcript)
64(No Transcript)
65Part 5 Migration from Illinois
- Nick DePrey
- Andrew Marchese
66Cost of Living Analysis
- Cost of living index 4th quarter 2005
67Cost of Living Analysis
- Comparisons
- If you live in Joliet and you have a 10,000
consumption bundle, to consume the same bundle,
you need - South Bend is not only a much cheaper city to
live in than south Chicago, it is the cheapest of
all the nearby metropolises
68Analysis of TANF Grants
- Illinois
- 2006 estimate 1.48 million people living in
poverty, 12.0 - June 2007
- 32,000 families received TANF cash grants, 77,000
total persons - Average per case cash grant 239/month,
2868/year - Average per person grant 99/month
- Total grants roughly 7.6 million
- In 2006 only 18.1 of all residents eligible for
TANF received it - TANF participation steadily declined in Illinois
since 2000 while poverty rates, and food stamp
and family health plan participation rates have
risen.
69Analysis of TANF Grants
- Indiana
- June 2007
- 38,000 families received TANF, 103,618 total
recipients - Total grants 7,904,857
- Average grants 204.47/month, 2453.64/yr
- Average grant per person 76.29
- Incentive to move to Indiana direct cash grants
are more readily available
70