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The group blog of The American Prospect

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN DESEGREGATION ENDS?

Debra Viadero of Education Week highlights a new study of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg school district in North Carolina. When the district ended its 30-year old busing program -- reverting to racially segregated neighborhood schools -- high-performing teachers fled schools that became predominantly black and poor.

This research, by Cornell labor economist C. Kirabo Jackson, is significant because it links the problem of teacher quality to the problem of school segregation. If you are an education reformer who believes teacher quality is the single biggest factor affecting student achievement, here is compelling evidence that you should also actively support existing desegregation programs. According to Kirabo's study, the best teachers -- those with higher test scores on licensing exams and a track record of improving their students' academic performance -- showed a clear preference for racially and socioeconomically integrated schools over schools overwhelmed by the challenges of poverty.

Some would say the solution is as simple as paying teachers much more to teach in disadvantaged schools. And while that is one option, it ignores the other positive effects of integration, ranging from increased tolerance of diversity to allowing poor kids to share in the fruits of having actively involved, middle-class parents advocating for their schools. In short, the more we learn about the myriad factors affecting educational outcomes, the more it seems that there is a natural synthesis between free market edu-reformers, who are focused on improving teacher quality, and more traditional education liberals, who tend to worry more about student poverty and segregation.

--Dana Goldstein



COMMENTS

Shouldn't those who believe teacher quality is the biggest factor affecting student acheivement be in favor of paying, evaluating, retaining, and promoting teachers based on the quality of their work rather than their longevity in the job or education level, as most teacher unions demand in their contracts?

Dana

I think it is more accurate to say that the single biggest factor inside of the school is teacher quality. I don't think you can seriously argue that teacher quality trumps socio-economic status of the student. SES far outweighs teacher quality as an overall determinant of educational outcomes.

Hey, your posts have inspired me! - I love the way you directly get to the point, and then work outwards. I’ve been trying to do figure out what I want to say about ,that would allow me to do exactly the same thing.

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