educational tracking
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Author(s):  
Jesper Fels Birkelund ◽  
Kristian Bernt Karlson ◽  
David Reimer

We study the relationship among family background, placements in upper secondary school tracks and labour market outcomes in the comprehensive welfare state of Denmark. We base our study on high-quality data from Danish administrative registers with a focus on the 1986 birth cohort, which allows us to examine very fine-grained measures of track placement in upper secondary schools. Our analyses show three results. First, upper secondary track placement is consequential for labour market outcomes, even after we control for the selection into tracks on pre-track academic performance and family background characteristics. Second, upper secondary track placement appears to affect labour market outcomes even net of higher education attainment. Third, educational tracking appears to play a role in intergenerational social reproduction net of family background-based skill gaps, suggesting that track choice help maintain inequalities across generations. We discuss the implications of our findings for the literature on educational tracking.<br /><br />Key messages<br /><ul><li>Upper secondary school tracking is relevant for labor market outcomes in Denmark.</li><br /><li>Even after we control for pre-tracking academic performance and family SES tracking effects persist.</li><br /><li>Track placement seems to affect labor market outcomes net of higher education attainment.</li><br /><li>Educational tracking appears to play a role in intergenerational social reproduction net of family background-based skill gaps.</li></ul>


2016 ◽  
Vol 53 (6) ◽  
pp. 1792-1833 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilana M. Umansky

This study examines the characteristics and determinants of English learners’ (ELs’) access to academic content in middle school (Grades 6–8). Following 10 years of data from a large urban school district in California, I identify two predominant characteristics of EL access to content: leveled tracking in which ELs are overrepresented in lower level classes and underrepresented in upper level classes and exclusionary tracking in which ELs are excluded from core academic content area classes, particularly English language arts. Using regression analysis and two regression discontinuity designs, I find evidence that ELs’ access to content is limited by a constellation of factors, including prior academic achievement, institutional constraints, English proficiency level, and direct effects of EL classification. This study contributes to understanding of the experiences and opportunities of students learning English as well as theory regarding educational tracking.


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