Diversified schools, in which students of various racial,
ethnic, and socioeconomic characteristics are balanced, have a
positive contextual effect on achievement for all groups compared
to schools with homogeneous student bodies that tend to help
affluent, white students and harm poor students and students of
color. The authors advise school districts convicted for operating
segregated schools on how to make all schools schools of choice
that must compete for students who enroll in them. And it discusses
ways of being fair and just in the distribution of educational
resources to affluent as well as poor students and to white
students as well as students of color.
School systems that are reluctant to use racial fairness
guidelines in the enrollment process are advised to use
socioeconomic fairness guidelines, because the absence of any
enrollment fairness guidelines tends to result in the return to
segregation and a dual school system helpful to a few but harmful
to many students. This book suggests ways of empowering parents and
professional educators and it discusses how to achieve a good
outcome for urban as well as rural school districts and for large
as well as small school systems. Among communities mentioned in
this study are Cambridge, Boston, Brockton MA; St.Lucie County, Lee
County, Hillsborough County (including Tampa) FL; Santa Rosa County
CA; Seattle WA; New Haven CT; Rockford IL; Milwaukee WI; and
Charleston County SC.
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