Diversity in Education
Diversity in Education
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Social Class, School and Non-School Environments, and Black/White Inequalitites in Children's Learning

  • Several school and non-school disadvantages accompany lower social class positions.
  • Black students experience many of these disadvantages more often than do White students, even net of class.
  • Non-school factors account for all of the class disparities in school-year learning but fail to fully explain why Black students lose ground to White students.
  • Classroom and school factors alone explain 43 percent of the initial Black/White gap in both reading and math gains.
  • Non-school factors primarily fuel class inequality in gains, while school factors primarily fuel black/white inequalities in gains.
  • School appears to exacerbate Black/White disparities in learning even as they slow the growth of social class gaps (compared with what occurs over the summer).
  • Because school factors appear to generate the Black/White gap more so than non-school influences, increased exposure to school speeds up the pace at which black children fall behind their white peers.
  • Racial segregation seems to be the leading culprit that explains what is it about schools that widens the Black/White gap.
  • When it comes to both housing and schools, race trumps class as the central axis upon which Blacks and Whites in the US are segregated.
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