Participation in school-choice programs has been increasing across the country since the early 1990s. While some have examined the role that families play in the school-choice process, research has largely ignored the role of social contexts in determining where a student attends school. This article improves on previous research by modeling the contextual effects of ele-mentary schools and neighborhoods on high school enrollment outcomes using population-level geocoded administrative data on an entire cohort of eighth graders from one of the largest urban school districts in the United States. The results of hierarchical multinomial logis-tic models suggest that the contextual effects of percentage black, poverty, and neighborhood concentr...
In this article, we introduce a special collection of research articles that consider the processes ...
In the mid 1990's, changes in Colorado state law and local school district policy resulted in the op...
In recent years, the responsibility for the desegregation of American public schools has transitione...
Research framed by Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory, suggests that neighborhood and school...
Because of the rise of public school choice programs, children who share a neighborhood are increasi...
Prior research has shown that children’s residence in high poverty neighborhoods increases their ris...
Intra-district open enrollment policies are increasingly implemented as a means of expanding childre...
Scholars hypothesize that both neighborhood and school contexts influence educational attainment, bu...
The achievement of elementary school students is affected by more than their own ability and the qua...
In high-poverty and racially segregated contexts, relatively disadvantaged students may be systemati...
School choice holds the prospect of vastly increasing the number of pathways that students can take ...
Little is known about the influence of school choice programs on race and economic segregation i pub...
Schools and neighborhoods are thought to be two of the most important contextual influences on stude...
Little is known about the inuence of school choice programs on race and economic segregation in publ...
Over the past few decades, school choice has been a widely debated issue around the globe, following...
In this article, we introduce a special collection of research articles that consider the processes ...
In the mid 1990's, changes in Colorado state law and local school district policy resulted in the op...
In recent years, the responsibility for the desegregation of American public schools has transitione...
Research framed by Bronfenbrenner's ecological systems theory, suggests that neighborhood and school...
Because of the rise of public school choice programs, children who share a neighborhood are increasi...
Prior research has shown that children’s residence in high poverty neighborhoods increases their ris...
Intra-district open enrollment policies are increasingly implemented as a means of expanding childre...
Scholars hypothesize that both neighborhood and school contexts influence educational attainment, bu...
The achievement of elementary school students is affected by more than their own ability and the qua...
In high-poverty and racially segregated contexts, relatively disadvantaged students may be systemati...
School choice holds the prospect of vastly increasing the number of pathways that students can take ...
Little is known about the influence of school choice programs on race and economic segregation i pub...
Schools and neighborhoods are thought to be two of the most important contextual influences on stude...
Little is known about the inuence of school choice programs on race and economic segregation in publ...
Over the past few decades, school choice has been a widely debated issue around the globe, following...
In this article, we introduce a special collection of research articles that consider the processes ...
In the mid 1990's, changes in Colorado state law and local school district policy resulted in the op...
In recent years, the responsibility for the desegregation of American public schools has transitione...