A Dynamic Framework of School Choice: Effects of Middle Schools on High School Choice

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dong Woo Hahm ◽  
Minseon Park
Games ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 31
Author(s):  
Yuanju Fang

Each year, millions of middle school graduates in China take a standardized test and compete for high school positions. Unlike other cities, Guangzhou still uses the immediate acceptance mechanism but implements a policy that students in the high-scoring group receive their allocations before those in the low-scoring group. In this paper, we study a class of the Guangzhou mechanisms, including the immediate acceptance (IA) and the serial dictatorship (SD) mechanism. We show that, if a collection of groups is refined by splitting its groups into a larger number of smaller subgroups, then the Guangzhou mechanism will perform more stably and less manipulable than before. This result provides a tool for policy makers to improve the allocation outcome of the IA mechanism under homogeneous priorities and justifies the use of a high-scoring student protection policy in Guangzhou’s high school admission.


2019 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-44
Author(s):  
Julia A. McWilliams ◽  
Erika M. Kitzmiller

Background With the expansion of charter school networks, population losses in urban district schools and stretched budgets have encouraged struggling districts to adopt closure-as-reform. School closings have received considerable attention in the media as a controversial reform, reconfiguring the educational landscapes of over 70 post-industrial cities like Chicago, Detroit, and New Orleans. However, in the last decade, few scholars have considered the project of examining closures—their process and their effects—empirically. Purpose In this article, we examine the rollout of 30 school closures in Philadelphia in 2012 and 2013 to explain how school closures have become yet another policy technology of Black community and school devaluation in the United States. Moving beyond educational studies that have focused on the outcomes of mass school closures like student achievement and cost savings, we argue that a thorough theorization of how race, violence, and community values relate to school closure as process could help to explain the ways in which contemporary educational policy reforms are creating new modes of communal disposability in cities’ poorest zip codes. Setting/Participants Data collection occurred in two comprehensive high schools in Philadelphia slated for closure in 2012 and 2013: Johnson High and Franklin High. Participants at both schools included students, teachers, parents, community members, and district officials. Research Design The authors spent several years in their respective schools recording observations of instructional practice, community meetings, and district events and interviewing key informants such as students, teachers, administrators, and district officials. The first author spent three years at Johnson High School, from September 2011 to June 2013. The second author spent five years at Franklin High School, from September 2008 to June 2013. She also spent hundreds of hours at the high school examining archival materials and interviewing students, teachers, and alumni about their experiences in the school and community. In addition to their individual case studies, the authors jointly transcribed and coded over two dozen community and district meetings’ video recordings during the 2012 and 2013 closures. In the aftermath of the school closures process, we used a comparative ethnographic method to compare and contrast the events that occurred at these two schools. Findings Suturing anthropologies of violence and education to frame the analysis, we explore moments of collision between policy discourses deployed by state and local officials that crafted closures as inevitable and threatened school communities’ articulations of the racialized implications of the closures. We further localize our analysis to demonstrate how two school communities—one majority Asian and another majority Black—with similar performances and characteristics met dramatically different fates. Given the lack of transparency in how decisions were made around which schools to close, the ways in which these communities read and responded to the closure threat offer a window into the ways in which race informed the valuation process across schools. Conclusions/Recommendations We conclude with a plea to state and federal policymakers to consider the long-term ramifications of school choice expansion and state disinvestment for the health and stability of traditional public schools. We encourage policymakers to move in a more reparative direction, prioritizing the needs of those “unchosen” by choice and imagining a system that might serve all students more equitably.


2011 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie Berry Cullen ◽  
Mark Long ◽  
Randall Reback
Keyword(s):  

2008 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 301-317 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheree J. Gibb ◽  
David M. Fergusson ◽  
L. John Horwood

This study examined the effects of single-sex and coeducational schooling on the gender gap in educational achievement to age 25. Data were drawn from the Christchurch Health and Development Study, a longitudinal study of a birth cohort of 1265 individuals born in 1977 in Christchurch, New Zealand. After adjustment for a series of covariates related to school choice, there were significant differences between single-sex and coeducational schools in the size and direction of the gender gap. At coeducational schools, there was a statistically significant gap favouring females, while at single-sex schools there was a non-significant gap favouring males. This pattern was apparent for educational achievement both at high school and in tertiary education. These results indicate that single-sex schooling may mitigate male disadvantages in educational achievement.


2017 ◽  
Vol 91 (1) ◽  
pp. 46-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolyn Sattin-Bajaj ◽  
Jennifer L. Jennings ◽  
Sean P. Corcoran ◽  
Elizabeth Christine Baker-Smith ◽  
Chantal Hailey

Given the dominance of residentially based school assignment, prior researchers have conceptualized K–12 enrollment decisions as beyond the purview of school actors. This paper questions the continued relevance of this assumption by studying the behavior of guidance counselors charged with implementing New York City’s universal high school choice policy. Drawing on structured interviews with 88 middle school counselors and administrative data on choice outcomes at these middle schools, we find that counselors generally believe lower-income students are on their own in making high school choices and need additional adult support. However, they largely refrain from giving action-guiding advice to students about which schools to attend. We elaborate street-level bureaucracy theory by showing how the majority of counselors reduce cognitive dissonance between their understanding of students’ needs and their inability to meet these needs adequately given existing resources. They do so by drawing selectively on competing policy logics of school choice, narrowly delineating their conception of their role, and relegating decisions to parents. Importantly, we also find departures from the predictions of this theory as approximately one in four counselors sought to meet the needs of individual students by enlarging their role despite the resource constraints they faced. Finally, we quantify the impact of variation in counselors’ approaches, finding that the absence of action-guiding advice is associated with students being admitted to lower-quality schools, on average.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (3, jul.-dez.) ◽  
pp. 298-322
Author(s):  
Harlon Romariz Rabelo Santos

Analisam-se aqui quatro casos de envolvimento parental, pesquisados em escolas públicas diferenciadas no Ceará. Casos oriundos de uma pesquisa com estudantes de ensino médio e seus pais, de duas das Escolas Estaduais de Educação Profissional (EEEP), em 2016. Análise é feita por meio da sociologia disposicionalista de Bernard Lahire, que foca nas ações e práticas dos indivíduos a partir da noção de esquemas disposicionais, contextos e lógicas de ação. Perspectiva que enfrenta a tensão entre o passado incorporado e o presente da ação. Os dados e a análise permitem reconhecer quadros contextuais externos que mobilizam ou inibem esquemas disposicionais incorporados, especificamente, em relação ao maior ou menor envolvimento parental entre pais de diferentes capitais socioeconômicos e culturais. Palavras-chave: Envolvimento parental; escolha escolar; escolas diferenciadas; sociologia da educação   Abstract Four cases of parental involvement are analyzed here, surveyed in different public schools in Ceará. Case studies from high school students and their parents, from two of the State Schools of Vocational Education (EEEP), in 2016. Analysis is made through the dispositional sociology of Bernard Lahire, which focuses on the actions and practices of individuals to from the notion of dispositional schemas, contexts and logic of action. Perspective facing the tension between the corporate past and the present of action. Data and analysis allow us to recognize external contextual frameworks that mobilize or inhibit dispositional schemes embodied, specifically in relation to greater or lesser parental involvement among parents from different socioeconomic and cultural capitals. Keywords: Parental involvement; school choice; differentiated schools; sociology of education.   Resumen Se analizan aquí cuatro casos de participación parental, investigados en escuelas públicas diferenciadas en el Ceará. Casos de los estudiantes de enseñanza media y sus padres, de dos de las Escuelas Estaduales de Educación Profesional (EEEP), en el año 2016. El análisis se hace por medio de la sociología disposicionalista de Bernard Lahire, que se centra en las acciones y prácticas de los individuos a la sociedad a partir de la noción de esquemas disposicionais, contextos y lógicas de acción. Perspectiva que enfrenta la tensión entre el pasado incorporado y el presente de la acción. Los datos y el análisis permiten reconocer cuadros contextuales externos que movilizan o inhiben esquemas disposicionais incorporados, específicamente, en relación al mayor o menor envolvimiento parental entre padres de diferentes capitales socioeconómicos y culturales. Palabras clave: Participación parental; elección escolar; escuelas diferenciadas; sociología de la educación.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 329-348
Author(s):  
Yaffa Buskila ◽  
Tamar Chen-Levi

The teaching profession is highly stressful. Stress is a negative phenomenon that develops under conditions of uncontrollable, prolonged and increased pressure. In this study, our goal is (a) to investigate teachers' perception of the sources of stress in school in light of the neoliberal reforms and (b) to compare these sources of stress in primary school, middle school and high school teachers. We hypothesize that the demands and the workload to improve scores in standardized tests, increase the need of teachers to take work home. Therefore, home demands may conflict with school demands. Furthermore, the greatest pressure is on elementary and middle school teachers: Early efforts to improve student achievements in the lower grades would result in better-prepared students in high schools. Data about the sources of stress is based on a previous study of Buskila, Buskila, Giris and Ablin (2019) that investigated the connection between the effects of stress on teachers on somatic syndromes. Three hundred and twenty-one public school teachers working in the Ministry of Education (MOE) in Israel participated in the study. Findings of the mean of the entire samples revealed that the highest level of stress was caused by intense teaching schedule with insufficient breaks. The second cause was related to the composition of the students in the class, and the third was home demands conflicting with school demands. In the middle schools, the highest levels of stress are caused by school principals (M=5.98, SD=3.09) and second is in high school (M=5.00, SD=3.33). The highest level of stress caused by the superintendent is on primary school teachers (M=3.97, SD=3.33) and the second are the middle school teachers (M=3.79, SD = 2.95). The lowest stress level was in high school (M=2.68, SD=2.83). Three significance differences of stress were found among primary, middle, and high schools: The school principal is the highest source of pressure in the middle schools (P=.034), and the superintendent causes the highest level of stress in primary schools (P=.006). The third cause was in high school, related to physical school conditions (p=.002). These results are relevant to teachers, educators, and policy makers involved in planning and managing educational strategies and teachers’ schedules. Identifying and preventing the sources of stress can facilitate better teaching conditions, and a more effective and efficient atmosphere in school. Keywords: Stress at school, teachers' stress, causes of stress in school


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document