Elisabeta Minca's research while affiliated with Brown University and other places

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Publications (1)


The Geography of Inequality: Why Separate Means Unequal in American Public Schools
  • Article

June 2012

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412 Reads

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184 Citations

Sociology of Education

John R Logan

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Elisabeta Minca

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Sinem Adar

Persistent school segregation does not only mean that children of different racial and ethnic backgrounds attend different schools, but their schools are also unequal in their performance. This study documents nationally the extent of disparities in school performance between schools attended by whites and Asians compared to blacks, Hispanics, and Native Americans. It further examines the geography of school inequality in two ways. First it analyzes the segregation of students between different types of school profiles based on racial composition, poverty and metropolitan location. Second it estimates the independent effects of these and other school and school district characteristics on school performance, identifying which aspects of school segregation are the most important sources of disadvantage. A focus on schools at the bottom of the distribution as in No Schools Left Behind would not ameliorate wide disparities between groups that are found run across the whole spectrum of school performance.

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Citations (1)


... In other countries, like in the United States, differentiation primarily takes the form of course-based tracking within schools. However, pronounced differences in school quality also exist among different public and private schools in the United States (Saporito and Sohoni 2007;Logan, Minca, and Adar 2012). In their seminal study of immigrant incorporation in and around New York City, Kasinitz et al. (2008, p. 133) highlight that the children of immigrants are unevenly distributed across a "complex and differentiated system of primary and secondary schools and colleges" (see also Crul and Holdaway 2009;Alba and Holdaway 2013, p. 268;Domina et al. 2017). ...

Reference:

More Than a Sorting Machine: Ethnic Boundary Making in a Stratified School System 1
The Geography of Inequality: Why Separate Means Unequal in American Public Schools
  • Citing Article
  • June 2012

Sociology of Education