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PetraG
Guest
The confounding variable with that situation is the holy grail of education: parental engagement. Wealthy school districts have a higher amount of money AND a higher proportion of parents in a position to support their children in academic success.The highest performing public schools have become essentially their own form of private schools, with high property taxes becoming the “tuition.”
The same thing shows up in competitive sports, of course. Wealthier districts have both more money to work with in their programs AND more students whose parents bankroll extracurricular development opportunities AND a smaller fraction of families who are more or less in chaos or strained more into survival mode than “success” mode.
An example: one study tested children at the beginning and then again at the end of school years, to see differences in what students learned over the course of the school year. What they found was a result they didn’t set out to find: the difference between students in higher or lower incomes schools wasn’t drastic in terms of what was accomplished during the school year. What WAS drastic was the change in scores between the END of one school year and the START of the next. Wealthier kids were given lots more to do that supported academic success over their summer breaks, giving them a big advantage over students from families who didn’t have that.
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