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. 2009 Oct 1;74(5):709-730.
doi: 10.1177/000312240907400502.

Low-Income Students and the Socioeconomic Composition of Public High Schools

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Low-Income Students and the Socioeconomic Composition of Public High Schools

Robert Crosnoe. Am Sociol Rev. .

Abstract

Increasing constraints placed on race-based school diversification have shifted attention to socioeconomic desegregation. Although past research suggests that socioeconomic desegregation can produce heightened achievement, the "frog pond" perspective points to potential problems with socioeconomic desegregation in nonachievement domains. Such problems are important in their own right, and they may also chip away at the magnitude of potential achievement benefits. In this article, I report conducted propensity score analyses and robustness calculations on a sample of public high schools in the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. As the proportion of the student body with middle- or high-income parents increased, low-income students progressed less far in math and science. Moreover, as the proportion of the student body with middle- or high-income or college-educated parents increased, low-income students experienced more psychosocial problems. Such patterns were often more pronounced among African American and Latino students. These findings suggest curricular and social psychological mechanisms of oft-noted frog pond effects in schools and extend the frog pond framework beyond achievement itself to demographic statuses (e.g., race/ethnicity and SES) perceptually linked to achievement. In terms of policy, these findings indicate that socioeconomic desegregation plans should also attend to equity in course enrollments and the social integration of students more generally.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Weighted Comparisons of Science Course Level between Schools Differing in Proportion of Middle- and High-Income Parents, by Race/Ethnicity
Figure 2
Figure 2
Weighted Comparisons of Psychosocial Indicators between Schools Differing in Proportion of Middle- and High-Income Parents, by Race/Ethnicity

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