Abstract
Three arguments regarding racial equity have arisen in the school choice debate. Choice advocates charge that choice will improve access to quality schools for disadvantaged minority students (Chubb & Moe 1990; Coons & Sugarman, 1978; Godwin & Kemerer, 2002; Viteritti, 1999). Critics argue that choice is unlikely to benefit minority students, but they are divided as to why this may be the case. Some maintain that unfettered choice leads to racial segregation (Henig, 1996; Mickelson, 2005; Saporito, 2003); others maintain that while choice may be successful in reducing segregation at the building level, choice programs may be problematic to the extent that they segregate schools at the classroom level (Wells & Crain, 1997; Wells, Holme, & Vasudeva, 2000; Wells & Roda, 2009; West, 1994). I use data from the eighth-grade wave of the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study to examine these questions. Results indicate that the racial composition of magnet schools is not statistically different from regular public schools; however, magnet schools are more heterogeneous at the classroom level, but only with respect to White/Hispanic racial composition. In particular, honors classes in magnet schools are significantly more diverse than honors classes in regular public schools, but only with regard to White/Hispanic diversity.
|
Ainsworth, J. (2002). Why does it take a village? The mediation of neighborhood effects on educational achievement. Social Forces, 81, 117-152. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Allison, P. (2002). Missing data. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Archbald, D. (2000). School choice and school stratification: Shortcomings of the stratification critique and recommendations for theory and research. Educational Policy, 14, 214-240. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Archbald, D. (2004). School choice, magnet schools, and the liberation model: An empirical study. Sociology of Education, 77, 283-310. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Armor, D. (1989). After busing: Education and choice. Public Interest, 95, 24-37. Google Scholar | |
|
Bifulco, R., Ladd, H. (2006). School choice, racial segregation, and test-score gaps: Evidence from North Carolina’s charter school program. Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 26(1), 31-56. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Bifulco, R., Ladd, H., Ross, S. (2009). Public school choice and integration evidence from Durham, North Carolina. Social Science Research, 38, 71-85. Google Scholar | Crossref | Medline | ISI | |
|
Blank, R., Levine, R., Steele, L. (1996). After 15 years: Magnet schools in urban education. In Elmore, R., Fuller, B., Orfield, G. (Eds.), Who chooses? Who loses? Culture, institutions, and the unequal effects of school choice (pp. 154-172). New York, NY: Teachers College Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Bonilla-Silva, E. (2010). Racism without Racist: Color-Blind Racism and the Persistence of Racial Inequality in the Unites States. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefiled. Google Scholar | |
|
Braddock, J. (1990). Tracking the middle grades: National patterns of grouping for instruction. Phi Delta Kappan, 71, 445-449. Google Scholar | ISI | |
|
Carnoy, M., Rebecca Jacobsen, R., Mishel, L., Rothstein, R. (2005). The charter school dust-up: Examining the evidence on enrollment and achievement. New York, NY: Teachers College Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Center for Immigrant Families . (2005). Segregated and unequal: The public elementary schools of District 3 in New York City. New York, NY: Author. Google Scholar | |
|
Chubb, J., Moe, T. (1988). Politics, markets, and the organization of schools. American Political Science Review, 82, 1065-1087. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Chubb, J., Moe, T. (1990). Politics, markets, and America’s schools. Washington, DC: The Brookings Institute. Google Scholar | |
|
Clotfelter, C., Ladd, H., Vigdor, J. (2005). Who teaches whom? Race and the distribution of novice teachers. Economics of Education Review, 24, 377-392. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Clotfelter, C., Ladd, H., Vigdor, J. (2009). Administrative decisions and racial segregation in North Carolina Schools. In Smrekar, C., Goldring, E. (Eds.), From the courtroom to the classroom: The shifting landscape of school desegregation (pp. 193-220). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Conger, D. (2005). Within-school segregation in an urban district. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 27, 225-244. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | |
|
Coons, J., Sugarman, S. (1978). Education by choice: The case for family control. Berkeley: University of California Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Darling-Hammond, L. (2004). Inequality and the right to learn: Access to qualified teachers in California’s public schools. Teachers College Record, 106, 1936-1966. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Easterly, W., Levine, R. (1997). Africa’s growth tragedy: Policies and ethnic divisions. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 112, 1203-1250. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Eitle, T. M. (2002). Special education or racial segregation: Understanding variation in the representation of black students in educable mentally handicapped programs. Sociological Quarterly, 43, 575-605. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Finley, M. (1984). Teachers and tracking in a comprehensive high school. Sociology of Education, 57, 233-243. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Fligel, S. (1993). Miracle in East Harlem: The fight for choice in public education. New York, NY: Random House. Google Scholar | |
|
Fuller, B. (2002). The public square, big or small? Charter schools in political context. In Fuller, B. (Ed.), Inside charter schools: The paradox of radical decentralization (pp.12-65). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Gamoran, A. (1987). The stratification of high school learning opportunities. Sociology of Education, 60, 135-155. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Gamoran, A. (1996). Student achievement in public magnet, public comprehensive, and private cit high schools. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 18(1), 1-18. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | |
|
Gans, H. (1999). The possibility of a new racial hierarchy in the twenty-first century United States. In Lamont, M. (Ed.), The cultural territories of race: Black and White boundaries. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Godwin, K., Kemerer, F. (2002). School choice tradeoffs: Liberty, equity, and diversity. Austin: University of Texas Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Goldring, E., Smrekar, C. (2000). Magnet schools and the pursuit of racial balance. Education and Urban Society, 33(1), 17-35. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Lankford, H., Loeb, S., Wykoff, J. (2002). Teacher sorting and the plight of urban schools: A descriptive analysis. Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 24(1), 37-62. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Lee, J., Bean, F. (2007). Reinventing the color line: Immigration and America’s new racial/ethnic divide. Social Forces, 86(2), 561-586. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Hallinan, M. (1994).Tracking: From theory to practice. Sociology of Education, 67, 79-84. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Hanushek, E., Rivkin, S. (2009).Harming the best: How schools affect the Black-White achievement gap. Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 28, 366-393. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Hausman, C., Goldring, E. (2000). School community in different magnet program structures. School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 11(1), 80-102. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Haynes, K., Phillips, K., Goldring, E. (2010). Latino parents’ choice of magnet school: How school choice differs across racial and ethnic boundaries. Education and Urban Society, 42, 758-789. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Hemphill, C. (2005, April 3). The kindergarten shuffle. The New York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/03/opinion/nyregionopinions/03CIhemphill.html?scp=1&sq=the%20kindhergarten%20shuffle&st=cse Google Scholar | |
|
Henig, J. (1996). The local dynamics of choice: Ethnic preferences and institutional responses. In Elmore, R., Fuller, B., Orfield, G. (Eds.), Who chooses? Who loses? Culture, institutions, and the unequal effects of school choice (pp. 95-117). New York, NY: Teachers College Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Holme, J., Wells, A. S. (2008). School choice beyond borders: Lessons for the reauthorization of NCLB from interdistrict desegregation and open enrollment plans. In Kahlberg, R. (Ed.), Improving on No Child Left Behind: Getting education reform right (pp. 139-215). Washington, DC: The Century Foundation. Google Scholar | |
|
Hoxby, C. (2002). Would school choice change the teaching profession? Journal of Human Resources, 37, 846-891. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Hoxby, C. (2003). School choice and school productivity: Could school choice be a tide that lifts all boats. In Hoxby, C. (Ed.), The economics of school choice (pp. 287-341). Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Kelly, S. (2004). Are teachers tracked? Social Psychology of Education, 7, 55-72. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Koedel, C., Betts, J., Rice, L., Zau, A. (2009). The integrating and segregating effects of school choice. Peabody Journal of Education, 84(2), 110-129. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Lucas, S., Berends, M. (2002). Sociodemographic diversity, correlated achievement, and de facto tracking. Sociology of Education, 75, 328-348. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Lucas, S., Berends, M. (2007). Race and track location in U.S. public schools. Research in Stratification and Mobility, 25, 169-187. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Martinez, V., Godwin, K., Kemerer, F. (1996). Public school choice in San Antonio: Who chooses and with what effects? In Elmore, R., Fuller, B., Orfield, G. (Eds.), Who chooses? Who loses? Culture, institutions, and the unequal effects of school choice (pp. 50-69). New York, NY: Teachers College Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Metz, M. (1986). Different by design: The context and character of three magnet schools. New York, NY: Routledge. Google Scholar | |
|
Mickelson, R. (2001). Subverting Swann: First- and second-generation segregation in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools. American Educational Research Journal, 38, 215-252. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | ISI | |
|
Mickelson, R. (2005). Are choice, diversity, equity, and excellence possible? Early evidence from post-Swann Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools, 2002-2004. In Scott, J. (Ed.), School Choice and diversity: What the evidence says (pp. 129-147). New York, NY: Teachers College Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Mickelson, R., Bottia, M., Southworth, S. (2008). School choice and segregation by race, class, and achievement. Education Policy Research Unit: Report . Retrieved from http://nepc.colorado.edu/files/CHOICE-08-Mickelson-FINAL-EG043008.pdf Google Scholar | |
|
Moore, D., Davenport, S. (1989). The new and improved sorting machine: Concerning school choice. Madison: National Center on Effective Secondary Schools, University of Wisconsin–Madison. Google Scholar | |
|
Morgan, P. R., McPartland, J. (1981). The extent of classroom segregation within desegregated schools. Center for Social Organization of Schools (Report 314). Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University. Google Scholar | |
|
Nathan, J. (1996). Charter schools: Creating hope and opportunity for American education. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. Google Scholar | |
|
National Center for Education Statistics . (2009). Combined user’s manual for the ECLS-K eighth grade and K-8 full sample data files and electronic codebooks. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Education. Google Scholar | |
|
National Center for Education Statistics . (2010). Trends in the use of school choice: 1993 to 2007. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Education. Google Scholar | |
|
New York City Department of Education . (2011). Kindergarten admissions. Retrieved from http://schools.nyc.gov/ChoicesEnrollment/Elementary/Enrollment+Information.html Google Scholar | |
|
Oakes, J. (1994). More than misapplied technology: A normative political response to Hallinan. Sociology of Education, 67, 84-88. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Oakes, J. (2005). Keeping track: How schools structure inequality. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Orfield, G. (2001). Schools more separate: Consequences of a decade of resegregation. Cambridge, MA: Civil Rights Project, Harvard University. Retrieved from http://www.law.harvard.edu/groups/civilrights/publications/resegregation01/schoolsseparate.pdf Google Scholar | |
|
Orfield, G, Frankenberg, E., Garces, L. (2008). Statement of American social scientists of research in school desegregation to the U.S. Supreme Court in Parents v. Seattle School District & Meredith v. Jefferson County. Urban Review, 40, 96-136. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Pflaum, S., Abramson, T. (1990). Teacher assignment, hiring, and preparation: Minority teachers in New York City. Urban Review, 22(1), 17-31. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Purnick, J. (2006, March 16). Schools strike a nerve. Parents yell. New York Times. Retrieved from http://select.nytimes.com/2006/03/16/nyregion/16matters.html Google Scholar | |
|
Renzulli, L., Evans, L. (2005). School choice, charter schools, and white flight. Social Problems, 52, 398-418. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Rosenbaum, J. (2001). Beyond college for all: Careers paths for the forgotten half. New York, NY: Russell Sage. Google Scholar | |
|
Rossell, C. (2002). The effectiveness of desegregation plans. In Rossell, C., Armor, D., Wahlberg, H. (Eds.), School desegregation in the 21st century (pp. 67-117). Westport, CT: Praeger. Google Scholar | |
|
Saluny, S. (2005a, February 18). City considers lottery system for admission to top schools. New York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes/2005/02/18/nyregion/18district.html Google Scholar | |
|
Saluny, S. (2005b, November 16). Gifted classes will soon use uniform test, Klein decides. New York Times. Retrieved from http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/16/education/16school.html?scp=1&sq=%22gifted+classes+will+soon+use+uniform+test%22&st=nyt Google Scholar | |
|
Saporito, S. (2003). Private choices, public consequences: Magnet school choice and segregation by race and poverty. Social Problems, 50, 181-203. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Saporito, S., Lareau, A. (1999). School selection as a process: The multiple dimensions of race in framing educational choice. Social Problems, 46, 418-439. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Schneider, M., Teske, P., Marschall, M. (2000). Choosing schools: Consumer choice and the quality of American schools. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Smrekar, C. (2009). Beyond the tipping point: Issues of racial diversity in magnet schools following unitary status. Peabody Journal of Education, 84, 209-226. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Smrekar, C., Goldring, E. (1999). School choice in urban America: Magnet schools and the pursuit of equity. New York, NY: Teachers College Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Steel, L., Levin, R. (1994). Educational innovation in multiracial contexts: The growth of magnet schools in American education. Palo Alto, CA: American Institutes for Research. Google Scholar | |
|
Straus, R. (2010). Measuring multi-ethnic segregation. Education and Urban Society, 42, 223-242. Google Scholar | SAGE Journals | |
|
U.S. Department of Education . (2003). Evaluation of the Magnet Schools Assistance Program, 1998 Grantees. Washington, DC: Author. Google Scholar | |
|
Vigdor, J. (2004). Community composition and collective action: Analyzing initial mail response to the 2000 Census. Review of Economics and Statistics, 86, 303-312. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Viteritti, J. (1999). Choosing equality: School choice, the constitution, and civil society. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Viteritti, J. (2010). School choice and market failure: How politics trumps economics in education and elsewhere. Journal of School Choice, 4, 203-221. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Wells, A. (1993). Time to choose: America at the crossroads of school choice policy. New York, NY: Hill & Wang. Google Scholar | |
|
Wells, A. S. (1996). African American students’ view of school choice. In Elmore, R., Fuller, B., Orfield, G. (Eds.), Who chooses? Who loses? Culture, institutions, and the unequal effects of school choice (pp. 25-49). New York, NY: Teachers College Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Wells, A. S., Crain, R. (1997). Stepping over the color line: African American students in White suburban schools. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Wells, A. S., Crain, R. (2005). Where school desegregation and school choice policies collide. In Scott, J. (Ed.), School choice and diversity: What the evidence says (pp. 59-76). New York, NY: Teachers College Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Wells, A. S., Holme, J., Vasudeva, A. (2000). Diversity and inequality: Montera Charter High School. In Fuller, B. (Ed.), Inside charter schools: The paradox of radical decentralization (pp. 144-176). Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Google Scholar | |
|
Wells, A. S., Oakes, J. (1996). Potential pitfalls of systemic reform: Early lessons from research on detracking. Sociology of Education, 69, 135-143. Google Scholar | Crossref | |
|
Wells, A., Roda, A. (2009). White parents, diversity and school choice policies: Where good intentions, anxiety, and privilege collide. Nashville, TN: National Center on School Choice. Vanderbilt University. Retrieved from http://www.vanderbilt.edu/schoolchoice/conference/papers/Wells-Roda_COMPLETE.pdf Google Scholar | |
|
Wells, A. S., Serna, I. (1996). The politics of culture: Understanding local political resistance to detracking in racially mixed schools. Harvard Educational Review, 66(1), 93-119. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
West, K. (1994). A desegregation tool that backfired: Magnet schools and classroom segregation. Yale Law Journal, 103, 2567-2592. Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI | |
|
Willie, C., Edwards, R., Alves, M. (2002). Student diversity, choice, and school improvement. Wesport, CT: Bergin and Garvey. Google Scholar |

