The practice of separating students according to ability level, also known as academic tracking, allows racially mixed schools to maintain segregated classrooms. This article examines the effects of academic tracking on the racial identity and educational opportunities of students at a mixed-race suburban charter school. Through five months of participant observation research, I found that the long-term practice of academic tracking created racial boundaries among students, silenced students of color in honors classes, and limited educational opportunity for all students. However, subsequent efforts to detrack, although superficial, resulted in positive outcomes for all students.
The purpose of this study is to explore the social, cultural, political, academic, and legal implic...
In this article, Uma M. Jayakumar investigates the cumulative impact of experiences with segregation...
Recent research highlights the academic gaps between Black students and White students. Much of the...
396 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2006.African Americans have been s...
Although racial inequality is frequently studied in education, skin tone stratification has received...
Research has demonstrated that there is a Black-White academic achievement gap across the United Sta...
Colorism in the United States of America has a long history rooted in systematic racism and slavery....
This article explores racial resegregation of students through the practice of tracking - the groupi...
Ability grouping is one of the oldest and most controversial issues in educational practice today. A...
In the 1920s, high school students were placed on one of three tracks: high, average, and low. Over ...
Significant scholarship has explained the connection between academic tracking, the within school se...
Disproportionate discipline has been a stubborn and pervasive problem that has affected students of ...
Educational leaders face significant obstacles when attempting to work on race relations in schools....
Rooted in an extensive history of racial segregation between schools, this research addresses the su...
Restricted until 2 June 2010.This case study examined what is known and what is not known about acad...
The purpose of this study is to explore the social, cultural, political, academic, and legal implic...
In this article, Uma M. Jayakumar investigates the cumulative impact of experiences with segregation...
Recent research highlights the academic gaps between Black students and White students. Much of the...
396 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2006.African Americans have been s...
Although racial inequality is frequently studied in education, skin tone stratification has received...
Research has demonstrated that there is a Black-White academic achievement gap across the United Sta...
Colorism in the United States of America has a long history rooted in systematic racism and slavery....
This article explores racial resegregation of students through the practice of tracking - the groupi...
Ability grouping is one of the oldest and most controversial issues in educational practice today. A...
In the 1920s, high school students were placed on one of three tracks: high, average, and low. Over ...
Significant scholarship has explained the connection between academic tracking, the within school se...
Disproportionate discipline has been a stubborn and pervasive problem that has affected students of ...
Educational leaders face significant obstacles when attempting to work on race relations in schools....
Rooted in an extensive history of racial segregation between schools, this research addresses the su...
Restricted until 2 June 2010.This case study examined what is known and what is not known about acad...
The purpose of this study is to explore the social, cultural, political, academic, and legal implic...
In this article, Uma M. Jayakumar investigates the cumulative impact of experiences with segregation...
Recent research highlights the academic gaps between Black students and White students. Much of the...