Diversity in Education
Diversity in Education
  • Overview
  • K-12 Integration, Desegregation, and Segregation Archive
  • K-16 STEM Archive
  • Browse
    • By Method of Analysis
    • By Unit of Analysis
    • By Data Type
    • By Journal Name or Institutional Affiliation
    • By Keyword
    • By Methodology
    • By Region
    • By Research
    • By Scholarship
    • By Sample Type
  • Help
  • Contact Us

Filter

  • Sort by

  • Filtered Search Term

  • Archive

  • Keywords

  • Research Designs

  • Analysis Methods

  • Researchers

Inequality and Black-White Achievement Trends in the NAEP

  • Controlling for child’s characteristic and average characteristics of families from same race group in that child’s state does help explain a portion of Black-White test score gap in math and reading.
  • Parental education particularly important
  • When state income inequality rises, the test score gap decreases but it is not contained to Black and White students.
  • In 1978, Black students scored 30.7 points lower (0.85 standard deviations) than White students on math tests
  • In 1990, Black students sharply gained in math scores which continued for the decade, with another sharp gain in 2004
  • In 1975, Black students scored 30.5 points (0.74 standard deviations) less than White students on reading test
  • No significant gain on reading test scores for Blacks except in 2004.
  • For both Blacks and Whites, income inequality is associated with lower math and reading scores
  • This inequality is slightly larger for Whites than for Blacks
  • Rising economic inequality negatively affects the achievement of Whites and Blacks but has little bearing on the Black-White test score gap
Skip to toolbar
  • Log In