Civil Society Goes to School: Parent-Teacher Associations and the Equality of Educational Opportunity

Where do parent-teacher associations (PTAs) and other similar school-linked nonprofits form? What role do PTAs play in distributing educational opportunities between and within public schools? In this paper, we link IRS data describing nonprofit organizations associated with North Carolina public sc...

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Main Authors: Brittany Murray, Thurston Domina, Linda Renzulli, Rebecca Boylan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Russell Sage Foundation 2019-03-01
Series:RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.rsfjournal.org/content/5/3/41
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spelling doaj-303df79b15124026b95d44d4e31916742020-11-24T21:51:03ZengRussell Sage FoundationRSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences2377-82532377-82612019-03-0153416310.7758/RSF.2019.5.3.03Civil Society Goes to School: Parent-Teacher Associations and the Equality of Educational OpportunityBrittany Murray0Thurston Domina1Linda Renzulli2Rebecca Boylan3University of North Carolina at Chapel HillUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel HillPurdue UniversityPurdue UniversityWhere do parent-teacher associations (PTAs) and other similar school-linked nonprofits form? What role do PTAs play in distributing educational opportunities between and within public schools? In this paper, we link IRS data describing nonprofit organizations associated with North Carolina public schools to school- and student-level administrative data in order to answer these questions. Our analyses suggest PTAs form in a wide variety of school contexts, but high-revenue PTAs form primarily in affluent, predominantly white schools. Students in schools with active PTAs enjoy relatively strong achievement growth compared to their peers in schools without active PTAs. However, our analyses suggest that in reading, the benefits associated with PTAs flow disproportionately to nonpoor students.https://www.rsfjournal.org/content/5/3/41administrative datacivil societyPTAssocial capitalopportunity hoarding
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brittany Murray
Thurston Domina
Linda Renzulli
Rebecca Boylan
spellingShingle Brittany Murray
Thurston Domina
Linda Renzulli
Rebecca Boylan
Civil Society Goes to School: Parent-Teacher Associations and the Equality of Educational Opportunity
RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences
administrative data
civil society
PTAs
social capital
opportunity hoarding
author_facet Brittany Murray
Thurston Domina
Linda Renzulli
Rebecca Boylan
author_sort Brittany Murray
title Civil Society Goes to School: Parent-Teacher Associations and the Equality of Educational Opportunity
title_short Civil Society Goes to School: Parent-Teacher Associations and the Equality of Educational Opportunity
title_full Civil Society Goes to School: Parent-Teacher Associations and the Equality of Educational Opportunity
title_fullStr Civil Society Goes to School: Parent-Teacher Associations and the Equality of Educational Opportunity
title_full_unstemmed Civil Society Goes to School: Parent-Teacher Associations and the Equality of Educational Opportunity
title_sort civil society goes to school: parent-teacher associations and the equality of educational opportunity
publisher Russell Sage Foundation
series RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences
issn 2377-8253
2377-8261
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Where do parent-teacher associations (PTAs) and other similar school-linked nonprofits form? What role do PTAs play in distributing educational opportunities between and within public schools? In this paper, we link IRS data describing nonprofit organizations associated with North Carolina public schools to school- and student-level administrative data in order to answer these questions. Our analyses suggest PTAs form in a wide variety of school contexts, but high-revenue PTAs form primarily in affluent, predominantly white schools. Students in schools with active PTAs enjoy relatively strong achievement growth compared to their peers in schools without active PTAs. However, our analyses suggest that in reading, the benefits associated with PTAs flow disproportionately to nonpoor students.
topic administrative data
civil society
PTAs
social capital
opportunity hoarding
url https://www.rsfjournal.org/content/5/3/41
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