Anonymous wrote:Here is an important finding:
"• The academic returns from economic integration diminished as school poverty levels rose. Children who lived in public housing and attended schools where no more than 20 percent of students qualified for a free or reduced price meal did best, whereas those children in public hous- ing who attended schools where as many as 35 percent of students who qualified for a free or reduced price meal performed no better aca- demically over time than public housing children who attended schools where 35 to 85 percent of students qualified for a free or reduced price meal"
This study was done by the 21st Century Fund. Richard Kahlenberg who also works for them was one of the authors of the recent Washington Post OPEd calling for DC to create policies that make sure schools that are now trending affluent use weighted controlled choice lotteries to hold that schools at a 50% FARMS rate. Why would be do that given this study's conclusion?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. I'm astonished that OP (who implies she/he is well-educated) is doing such a pathetic job of looking at statistics and then declaring he/she knows whether poor kids benefit from going to school with middle class kids.
First, as someone noted earlier, the testing starts at third grade and there have been any number of changes (or not) going on in the earlier grades. Second, you have to look at whether there has been any noticeable improvement on the part of individual students over time, NOT AT AGGREGATE SCORES THAT COMPARE DIFFERENT GROUPS OF STUDENTS, which is what you're doing now. Third, you have to compare any change (or lack thereof) to a control group of poor students who have gone to school in majority poor schools.
You have done none of these things so you don't know whether poor students on average have benefited from going to school with middle-class students. But go on, continue to interpret the data in a way that makes you feel superior, because I know that nothing I say (even though I'm a senior researcher) will make a difference to you.
FTR, I haven't looked at the research myself but I know enough to know when I don't know the answer to something. You all think you're better educated than you actually are. If you don't want your kids to go to school with a lot of poor students, that's fine. I can accept that. But don't give us some bullshit about test scores when you don't know what you're talking about. Seriously, go back to school and take a research methods course.
So as a "senior researcher", you have nothing substantive to add to the discussion other than a) you're ignorant about this topic and b) everybody else is looking at this the wrong way. Gee, thanks, senior researcher.
Anonymous wrote:Agree, OP. I have nothing against socioeconomic integration but anyone who thinks it is a high priority issue we must enact policy on, because of some misguided belief that it will benefit the poor or close the achievement gap is seriously mistaken. It would probably cause far more harm than good. There already is far more choice in the system now than there was a decade ago.
Anonymous wrote:Have an IB system and you stop the jumping around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On the converse of this, I certainly believe the case needs to be made that having poor students with middle class students improves student performance for the middle class students.
I know some like diversity from the middle class perspective so they don't feel so isolated from those who are struggling, but the case for the benefit to the poor would resonate and justify a lot of what might be considered in student assignment.
If someone were only making such a case...
It doesn't, in fact the opposite is true - the middle class students suffer due to more disruptive behavior and discipline problems, along with classes going at a slower pace due to a greater need for remediation.