Private Schools AREN'T Better For Low-Income Students (University Of Virginia STUDY)

SirReginald

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TLDR

Some of the other key takeaways from their study:

  • About a third of children had attended private school for at least a year at some point between kindergarten and grade 9. Those who attended private school went for an average of 5.73 years.
  • Among the kids who went to private school, the largest proportion enrolled during kindergarten. Twenty-three percent started in kindergarten compared to 17 percent in third grade, 16 percent in sixth grade and 14 percent in ninth grade.


Study shows private schools aren’t better for low-income students

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The King's Academy in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Randal Martin/Wikimedia)

Denise-Marie Ordway



Low-income students don’t benefit more from private school than public school, suggests new research from scholars at the University of Virginia.

The study, forthcoming in the Educational Researcher, offers new insights to help inform debates about whether children from poor families would learn more and earn higher test scores if they were able to attend private school.

Several states use public money to offer lower-income students vouchers to pay for private school. More than a dozen states allow individuals and corporations to donate a portion of the state taxes they owe to nonprofit organizations that provide private school scholarships to certain types of students – generally, those who have a disability or come from lower-income households, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. These private school vouchers and corporate tax credit scholarships are among several school choice options that have grown in popularity in the United States despite widespread criticisms.

For this new study, researchers analyzed data collected from a group of 1,097 kids in nine states who were followed from birth through age 15. The scholars looked at how many had attended private school between kindergarten and their freshman year of high school. They also looked at how the kids performed as ninth graders on a range of benchmarks, including test scores.

When the scholars did a simple comparison, they learned that students who had attended private school at any time in their academic career performed better on most benchmarks than students who only attended public school. But when the scholars controlled for factors related to family resources — the household income-to-needs ratio, for example — they got a very different picture.

They discovered that kids who went to private school and those who only attended public school performed equally as well in the ninth grade in terms of math achievement, literacy, grade-point averages and working memory. They were just as likely to take more rigorous math and science courses, expect to go to college, have behavioral problems and engage in risky behavior such as fighting and smoking.

The findings didn’t change based on where students lived. In other words, the findings also applied to students in urban and rural areas.

“By simply controlling for variation in family income, the majority of these differences in outcomes were eliminated,” explain the researchers, Robert C. Pianta, who’s the dean of and a professor at UVA’s Curry School of Education, and Arya Ansari, a postdoctoral research associate there.

“The apparent ‘advantages’ of private school education … were almost entirely due to the socioeconomic advantages that selected families into these types of schools and were not attributed to private school education itself.”

Study shows private schools aren't better for low-income students
 

staticshock

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“The apparent ‘advantages’ of private school education … were almost entirely due to the socioeconomic advantages that selected families into these types of schools and were not attributed to private school education itself.”

That’s the whole point of private schools tho:gucci:

To be around students who care about learning & know how to act. You can learn the same things you do at public schools that you can learn at private or charter schools.

It’s about putting kids in a environment where education is taken seriously & they don’t have to be around knuckle heads.
 

ORDER_66

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Isnt the point of private schools is for kids to make connections into the upper class world and get hooked up?!:patrice: It DOES make a difference... if a family that is in public schools may never meet another influential family that has their kids in private school...
 

KingJay

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Depends on the private school. A lot of my best friends in HS were low income on scholarships and were the ones who went to the best universities often. Harvard, Cornel, Northeastern, Penn, Columbia, etc.

Obviously getting into a top school alone doesn't guarantee your future, but you're setup pretty damn well for life
 

invalid

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From what I know, kids from lower socio-economic backgrounds tend to struggle in private/boarding schools settings because they have a hard time fitting in socially with the rest of the student body if majority of the students are from upper middle/upper class backgrounds. You see this all the time actually.

Kids who live more integrated lifestyles tend to do better overall in that environment.
 

philmonroe

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basically you have to be connected or truly exceptional to get ahead. And rich (white) kids could fukk up and it wouldn't stick with them like it does for poor kids.
Nah using this logic nobody can ever change their circumstances and that's not true. You need a new circle of friends my man if you believe what you posted.
 
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