- Teachers are much more likely to report incidences of problem behavior in predominantly Black schools. Consequently, the instructional environment in predominantly Black schools and classrooms is tailored somewhat to reduce classroom disruptions and maintain an orderly environment.
- Teachers in predominately Black schools report substantially more problem behavior than integrated/non-Black schools.
- Predominantly Black classrooms were more likely to engage in seatwork and reading aloud, and less likely to engage in question-and-answer sessions. These forms of instruction share two common features: they are no interactive and highly controlled by the teacher.
- There is convincing evidence that many predominantly Black schools have poor behavioral climates.
- Teachers in predominantly Black schools do modify their instruction somewhat in response to their students’ behavior, but the difference is modest.
- Although many teachers in predominantly Black schools struggle with the behavioral climate in those schools, at least with respect to teachers’ instructional approach, the behavioral climate does not yet constitute a crisis.