School Choice Participation Rates: Which Districts are Pressured?

School choice policies are intended to provide students in poorly performing schools the option of transferring to a better school. The associated loss of funding to new competitors is expected, in turn, to benefit students who remain in their assigned schools by spurring improved performance among...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yongmei Ni, David Arsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2011-10-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/777
id doaj-048953859e62446780df0b32d76df4e2
record_format Article
spelling doaj-048953859e62446780df0b32d76df4e22020-11-25T03:08:09ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412011-10-0119010.14507/epaa.v19n29.20111035School Choice Participation Rates: Which Districts are Pressured?Yongmei Ni0David Arsen1University of UtahMichigan State UniversitySchool choice policies are intended to provide students in poorly performing schools the option of transferring to a better school. The associated loss of funding to new competitors is expected, in turn, to benefit students who remain in their assigned schools by spurring improved performance among the educators in them. The prospects for such systemic improvement are greatest if in fact student transfers and the market signals they provide are determined by school effectiveness rather than the social and racial characteristics of a district’s students. To test this proposition, we employ a series of fixed effects regressions to analyze the relative influence of school effectiveness versus student demographic composition on participation rates in Michigan’s charter school and inter-district choice policies. Our results indicate that school effectiveness has no systematic influence on participation rates for either choice policy, while the loss of students to choice options increases significantly in districts serving high concentrations of low-income students. Therefore, Michigan’s school choice policies create financial pressures not on schools that are performing most poorly but rather on those that face the most difficult educational challenges.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/777charter schoolsschool competitionschool effectivenesssocial and racial characteristics.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yongmei Ni
David Arsen
spellingShingle Yongmei Ni
David Arsen
School Choice Participation Rates: Which Districts are Pressured?
Education Policy Analysis Archives
charter schools
school competition
school effectiveness
social and racial characteristics.
author_facet Yongmei Ni
David Arsen
author_sort Yongmei Ni
title School Choice Participation Rates: Which Districts are Pressured?
title_short School Choice Participation Rates: Which Districts are Pressured?
title_full School Choice Participation Rates: Which Districts are Pressured?
title_fullStr School Choice Participation Rates: Which Districts are Pressured?
title_full_unstemmed School Choice Participation Rates: Which Districts are Pressured?
title_sort school choice participation rates: which districts are pressured?
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2011-10-01
description School choice policies are intended to provide students in poorly performing schools the option of transferring to a better school. The associated loss of funding to new competitors is expected, in turn, to benefit students who remain in their assigned schools by spurring improved performance among the educators in them. The prospects for such systemic improvement are greatest if in fact student transfers and the market signals they provide are determined by school effectiveness rather than the social and racial characteristics of a district’s students. To test this proposition, we employ a series of fixed effects regressions to analyze the relative influence of school effectiveness versus student demographic composition on participation rates in Michigan’s charter school and inter-district choice policies. Our results indicate that school effectiveness has no systematic influence on participation rates for either choice policy, while the loss of students to choice options increases significantly in districts serving high concentrations of low-income students. Therefore, Michigan’s school choice policies create financial pressures not on schools that are performing most poorly but rather on those that face the most difficult educational challenges.
topic charter schools
school competition
school effectiveness
social and racial characteristics.
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/777
work_keys_str_mv AT yongmeini schoolchoiceparticipationrateswhichdistrictsarepressured
AT davidarsen schoolchoiceparticipationrateswhichdistrictsarepressured
_version_ 1724667293271588864