Selective Enrollment Public Schools and District-Level Achievement Outcomes from 3rd to 8th Grade

Fierce local debates throughout the United States surround the equity of admitting students to public schools using academic criteria. Although research has evaluated the central assumption of these debates—that Selective Enrollment Public (SEP) schools enhance the welfare of students who attend the...

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Main Author: Véronique Irwin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Sociological Science 2020-04-01
Series:Sociological Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v7-5-100/
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spelling doaj-9a136e3a8d474afb99b9ad734c26e5b62020-11-25T02:56:42ZengSociety for Sociological ScienceSociological Science2330-66962330-66962020-04-017510012710.15195/v7.a5Selective Enrollment Public Schools and District-Level Achievement Outcomes from 3rd to 8th GradeVéronique Irwin0University of California, BerkeleyFierce local debates throughout the United States surround the equity of admitting students to public schools using academic criteria. Although research has evaluated the central assumption of these debates—that Selective Enrollment Public (SEP) schools enhance the welfare of students who attend them—none has addressed the district-level outcomes associated with these schools. This is important because the selectivity and scope of SEP schools produce tiered school systems (SEP districts). This district-level process, in turn, calls for an analysis of district-level achievement outcomes. To address this gap, I compile an original list of SEP schools using an innovative web scraping procedure. I combine these data with newly available district-level measures of third to eighth grade achievement from the Stanford Education Data Archive. Analyses follow a difference-in-differences design, using grade level as the longitudinal dimension. This approach facilitates a falsification test, using future treated districts, to reject spurious causation. I find evidence of overall slower growth in mean math achievement in SEP districts and for white, black, and Latinx racial/ethnic groups separately. SEP districts also see an increase in the white–Latinx math achievement gap. This work highlights the importance of considering SEP schools as part of a differentiated school system.https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v7-5-100/selective enrollment public schoolsstudent differentiationselectivityscopedifference-in-differences
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Véronique Irwin
spellingShingle Véronique Irwin
Selective Enrollment Public Schools and District-Level Achievement Outcomes from 3rd to 8th Grade
Sociological Science
selective enrollment public schools
student differentiation
selectivity
scope
difference-in-differences
author_facet Véronique Irwin
author_sort Véronique Irwin
title Selective Enrollment Public Schools and District-Level Achievement Outcomes from 3rd to 8th Grade
title_short Selective Enrollment Public Schools and District-Level Achievement Outcomes from 3rd to 8th Grade
title_full Selective Enrollment Public Schools and District-Level Achievement Outcomes from 3rd to 8th Grade
title_fullStr Selective Enrollment Public Schools and District-Level Achievement Outcomes from 3rd to 8th Grade
title_full_unstemmed Selective Enrollment Public Schools and District-Level Achievement Outcomes from 3rd to 8th Grade
title_sort selective enrollment public schools and district-level achievement outcomes from 3rd to 8th grade
publisher Society for Sociological Science
series Sociological Science
issn 2330-6696
2330-6696
publishDate 2020-04-01
description Fierce local debates throughout the United States surround the equity of admitting students to public schools using academic criteria. Although research has evaluated the central assumption of these debates—that Selective Enrollment Public (SEP) schools enhance the welfare of students who attend them—none has addressed the district-level outcomes associated with these schools. This is important because the selectivity and scope of SEP schools produce tiered school systems (SEP districts). This district-level process, in turn, calls for an analysis of district-level achievement outcomes. To address this gap, I compile an original list of SEP schools using an innovative web scraping procedure. I combine these data with newly available district-level measures of third to eighth grade achievement from the Stanford Education Data Archive. Analyses follow a difference-in-differences design, using grade level as the longitudinal dimension. This approach facilitates a falsification test, using future treated districts, to reject spurious causation. I find evidence of overall slower growth in mean math achievement in SEP districts and for white, black, and Latinx racial/ethnic groups separately. SEP districts also see an increase in the white–Latinx math achievement gap. This work highlights the importance of considering SEP schools as part of a differentiated school system.
topic selective enrollment public schools
student differentiation
selectivity
scope
difference-in-differences
url https://www.sociologicalscience.com/articles-v7-5-100/
work_keys_str_mv AT veroniqueirwin selectiveenrollmentpublicschoolsanddistrictlevelachievementoutcomesfrom3rdto8thgrade
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