Closed Schools, Open Markets: A Hot Spot Spatial Analysis of School Closures and Charter Openings in Detroit

The purpose of this study is to use geographic information systems to map the spatial distribution of traditional public school closures and the opening of charter schools in Detroit. To achieve this purpose, we examine the following research questions: (a) How are traditional public school closures...

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Main Authors: Terrance L. Green, Joanna D. Sánchez, Andrene J. Castro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-05-01
Series:AERA Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858419850097
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spelling doaj-cf543b0155c94362b9516d1a01a6f17d2020-11-25T03:43:39ZengSAGE PublishingAERA Open2332-85842019-05-01510.1177/2332858419850097Closed Schools, Open Markets: A Hot Spot Spatial Analysis of School Closures and Charter Openings in DetroitTerrance L. GreenJoanna D. SánchezAndrene J. CastroThe purpose of this study is to use geographic information systems to map the spatial distribution of traditional public school closures and the opening of charter schools in Detroit. To achieve this purpose, we examine the following research questions: (a) How are traditional public school closures and the opening of charter schools spatially distributed throughout neighborhoods in Detroit during three education policy eras? (b) How, if at all, might these schools’ spatial patterns cluster in certain neighborhoods to create hot spots of traditional public school closures and/or charter school openings? As such, this descriptive study uses hot spot geospatial analysis to identify whether the spatial occurrence of traditional public school closures and charter school openings is randomly distributed or if it occurs in statistically significant spatial clusters. Rollback and rollout neoliberalism is used to theoretically frame the study and guide the analysis. Findings suggest that charter school openings occur more often in hot spots or concentrated ways than the closure of traditional public schools in Detroit. We conclude with implications for future research.https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858419850097
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Terrance L. Green
Joanna D. Sánchez
Andrene J. Castro
spellingShingle Terrance L. Green
Joanna D. Sánchez
Andrene J. Castro
Closed Schools, Open Markets: A Hot Spot Spatial Analysis of School Closures and Charter Openings in Detroit
AERA Open
author_facet Terrance L. Green
Joanna D. Sánchez
Andrene J. Castro
author_sort Terrance L. Green
title Closed Schools, Open Markets: A Hot Spot Spatial Analysis of School Closures and Charter Openings in Detroit
title_short Closed Schools, Open Markets: A Hot Spot Spatial Analysis of School Closures and Charter Openings in Detroit
title_full Closed Schools, Open Markets: A Hot Spot Spatial Analysis of School Closures and Charter Openings in Detroit
title_fullStr Closed Schools, Open Markets: A Hot Spot Spatial Analysis of School Closures and Charter Openings in Detroit
title_full_unstemmed Closed Schools, Open Markets: A Hot Spot Spatial Analysis of School Closures and Charter Openings in Detroit
title_sort closed schools, open markets: a hot spot spatial analysis of school closures and charter openings in detroit
publisher SAGE Publishing
series AERA Open
issn 2332-8584
publishDate 2019-05-01
description The purpose of this study is to use geographic information systems to map the spatial distribution of traditional public school closures and the opening of charter schools in Detroit. To achieve this purpose, we examine the following research questions: (a) How are traditional public school closures and the opening of charter schools spatially distributed throughout neighborhoods in Detroit during three education policy eras? (b) How, if at all, might these schools’ spatial patterns cluster in certain neighborhoods to create hot spots of traditional public school closures and/or charter school openings? As such, this descriptive study uses hot spot geospatial analysis to identify whether the spatial occurrence of traditional public school closures and charter school openings is randomly distributed or if it occurs in statistically significant spatial clusters. Rollback and rollout neoliberalism is used to theoretically frame the study and guide the analysis. Findings suggest that charter school openings occur more often in hot spots or concentrated ways than the closure of traditional public schools in Detroit. We conclude with implications for future research.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858419850097
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