Low-Income Students and the Socioeconomic Composition of Public High Schools

Increasing constraints placed on race-based school diversification have shifted attention to socioeconomic desegregation. Although past research suggests that socioeconomic desegregation can produce heightened achievement, the “frog pond” perspective points to potential problems with socioeconomic desegregation in nonachievement domains. Such problems are important in their own right, and they may also chip away at the magnitude of potential achievement benefits. In this article, I report conducted propensity score analyses and robustness calculations on a sample of public high schools in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. As the proportion of the student body with middle- or high-income parents increased, low-income students progressed less far in math and science. Moreover, as the proportion of the student body with middle- or high-income or college-educated parents increased, low-income students experienced more psychosocial problems. Such patterns were often more pronounced among African American and Latino students. These findings suggest curricular and social psychological mechanisms of oft-noted frog pond effects in schools and extend the frog pond framework beyond achievement itself to demographic statuses (e.g., race/ethnicity and SES) perceptually linked to achievement. In terms of policy, these findings indicate that socioeconomic desegregation plans should also attend to equity in course enrollments and the social integration of students more generally.

[1]  Barbara Schneider,et al.  The ambitious generation : America's teenagers, motivated but directionless , 2000 .

[2]  Robert Crosnoe,et al.  Double Disadvantage or Signs of Resilience? The Elementary School Contexts of Children From Mexican Immigrant Families , 2005 .

[3]  Helen F. Ladd,et al.  Federal Oversight, Local Control, and the Specter of "Resegregation" in Southern Schools , 2005 .

[4]  Glen H. Elder,et al.  Students' Attachment and Academic Engagement: The Role of Race and Ethnicity. , 2001 .

[5]  Herbert W. Marsh,et al.  The big-fish-little-pond effect on academic self-concept , 1987 .

[6]  Stephanie Hatheway,et al.  Class and Schools - Using Social, Economic, and Educational Reform to Close the Black-White Achievement Gap , 2006 .

[7]  Jacob I. Stowell,et al.  School Segregation in Metropolitan Regions, 1970–2000: The Impacts of Policy Choices on Public Education1 , 2008, American Journal of Sociology.

[8]  C. Adelman Answers In The Tool Box: Academic Intensity, Attendance Patterns, And Bachelor's Degree Attainment , 1999 .

[9]  V. Lee,et al.  How High School Organization Influences the Equitable Distribution of Learning in Mathematics and Science. , 1997 .

[10]  Richard Arum Schools and Communities: Ecological and Institutional Dimensions , 2000 .

[11]  Christine L. Williams The Glass Escalator: Hidden Advantages for Men in the “Female” Professions , 1992 .

[12]  L. Cremin American Education: The National Experience, 1783–1876 , 1980 .

[13]  Stephen B. Plank,et al.  Finding One's Place: Teaching Styles and Peer Relations in Diverse Classrooms , 2000 .

[14]  E. Goffman Stigma; Notes On The Management Of Spoiled Identity , 1964 .

[15]  A. Mood,et al.  Equality of Educational Opportunity. , 1967 .

[16]  K. Frank,et al.  Does NBPTS Certification Affect the Number of Colleagues a Teacher Helps With Instructional Matters? , 2008 .

[17]  M. S. Bassis The Campus as a Frog Pond: A Theoretical and Empirical Reassessment , 1977, American Journal of Sociology.

[18]  J. Rosenbaum Beyond College For All , 2001 .

[19]  Vincent J. Roscigno,et al.  The Black-White Gap in Mathematics Course Taking , 2009 .

[20]  Jeffrey R. Kling,et al.  Moving At-Risk Teenagers Out of High-Risk Neighborhoods: Why Girls Fare Better Than Boys , 2006 .

[21]  Barbara Schneider,et al.  Opportunities For Learning: Course Sequences and Positional Advantages , 1997 .

[22]  Barbara Schneider,et al.  Sequences of opportunities for learning , 1994 .

[23]  G. Imbens,et al.  Efficient Estimation of Average Treatment Effects Using the Estimated Propensity Score , 2000 .

[24]  Adam Gamoran,et al.  Student Achievement in Public Magnet, Public Comprehensive, and Private City High Schools , 1996 .

[25]  S. Morgan Counterfactuals, Causal Effect Heterogeneity, and the Catholic School Effect on Learning. , 2001 .

[26]  Donna Y. Ford,et al.  The Handbook of Research on Multicultural Education , 1996 .

[27]  P. Millar,et al.  FURSTENBERG, Frank F. Jr., Thomas D. COOK, Jacquelynne ECCLES, Glen H. ELDER, Jr., and Arnold SAMEROFF, MANAGING TO MAKE IT: Urban Families and Adolescent Success , 2002 .

[28]  James E. Rosenbaum Beyond College For All: Career Paths for the Forgotten Half , 2002 .

[29]  P. Bearman,et al.  Protecting adolescents from harm: Findings from the National Longitudinal Study on Adolescent Health. , 1997 .

[30]  M. Weissman,et al.  Community surveys of psychiatric disorders , 1989 .

[31]  Arthur G. Powell,et al.  The Shopping Mall High School: Winners and Losers in the Educational Marketplace. , 1985 .

[32]  A. Huston,et al.  Socioeconomic status, schooling, and the developmental trajectories of adolescents. , 2007, Developmental psychology.

[33]  T. Espenshade,et al.  The Frog Pond Revisited: High School Academic Context, Class Rank, and Elite College Admission , 2005 .

[34]  G. Imbens,et al.  Estimation of Causal Effects using Propensity Score Weighting: An Application to Data on Right Heart Catheterization , 2001, Health Services and Outcomes Research Methodology.

[35]  Leslie Martín,et al.  Adult Social Capital and Track Placement of Ethnic Groups in Germany , 2007, American Journal of Education.

[36]  S. Morgan,et al.  Matching Estimators of Causal Effects , 2006 .

[37]  N. Trowbridge Effects of socio-economic class on self-concept of children , 1970 .

[38]  J. Coleman,et al.  Public and Private High Schools: The Impact of Communities , 1987 .

[39]  P. A. Goldsmith Schools' Racial Mix, Students' Optimism, and the Black-White and Latino-White Achievement Gaps , 2004 .

[40]  H. Marsh,et al.  Big-fish-little-pond effect on academic self-concept. A cross-cultural (26-country) test of the negative effects of academically selective schools. , 2003, The American psychologist.

[41]  G. Orfield,et al.  Dismantling Desegregation: The Quiet Reversal of Brown V. Board of Education , 1996 .

[42]  D. Rubin,et al.  The central role of the propensity score in observational studies for causal effects , 1983 .

[43]  Gregory J. Palardy,et al.  Does Segregation Still Matter? The Impact of Student Composition on Academic Achievement in High School , 2005, Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education.

[44]  Robert Crosnoe The Connection Between Academic Failure and Adolescent Drinking in Secondary School , 2006, Sociology of education.

[45]  C. Adelman Answers in the Toolbox , 2006 .

[46]  Daniel A. McFarland,et al.  Motives and Contexts of Identity Change: A Case for Network Effects , 2005 .

[47]  K. Magnuson,et al.  From statistical associations to causation: what developmentalists can learn from instrumental variables techniques coupled with experimental data. , 2008, Developmental psychology.

[48]  Susan E. Mayer How Economic Segregation Affects Children's Educational Attainment , 2002 .

[49]  Dalton Conley,et al.  Black-white achievement gap and family wealth. , 2008, Child development.

[50]  K. Frank Impact of a Confounding Variable on a Regression Coefficient , 2000 .

[51]  Sean F. Reardon,et al.  The changing structure of school segregation: Measurement and evidence of multiracial metropolitan-area school segregation, 1989–1995 , 2000, Demography.

[52]  R. Mickelson Subverting Swann: First- and Second-Generation Segregation in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools , 2001 .

[53]  Rachel A. Lotan,et al.  Working for Equity in Heterogeneous Classrooms: Sociological Theory in Practice (Sociology of Education Series) , 1997 .

[54]  Alexander M. Mood,et al.  Equality of Educational Opportunity. , 1967 .

[55]  J. Schofield Review of Research on School Desegregation's Impact on Elementary and Secondary School Students. , 1989 .

[56]  W. Steven Barnett,et al.  On "Politics, Markets, and American Schools.". , 1992 .

[57]  Sean F. Reardon,et al.  Implications of Income-Based School Assignment Policies for Racial School Segregation , 2006 .

[58]  D. Entwisle,et al.  Lasting Consequences of the Summer Learning Gap , 2007 .

[59]  Robert Crosnoe,et al.  Maternal Education, Early Child Care and the Reproduction of Advantage , 2009, Social forces; a scientific medium of social study and interpretation.

[60]  J. Eccles,et al.  Schooling and Mental Health , 2000 .

[61]  B J Culliton,et al.  Health. , 1974, Science.

[62]  J. Willms,et al.  Effects of Parental Involvement on Eighth-Grade Achievement. , 1996 .

[63]  Catherine Riegle-Crumb,et al.  The Role of Gender and Friendship in Advanced Course Taking , 2006, Sociology of education.

[64]  Annette Lareau Unequal Childhoods: Class, Race, and Family Life , 2003 .