We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
How Institutional Context Shapes the Accounts of School Choice and Boundary-Making Among Middle Class Parents in an Urban School District.
- Authors
Knudson, Paul
- Abstract
This paper explores how urban middle-class parents with children at the elementary school level construct accounts about school choice in comparison to parents with children at the middle and high school levels. Previous studies have largely focused on the former. Data for this study come from in-depth interviews with 44 parents who enrolled their children in an urban school district. Findings suggest that parents' choices and narratives concerning schools are affected by the school district's institutional context. Parents with children at the elementary school level largely avoided their neighborhooddesignated schools and secured spots in the city's more desirable magnet schools. The group distinctions created at this level were "bad schools" and "bad parents" versus "good schools" and "good parents." Parents with children in the middle and high school years similarly avoided the district's general programs and secured the desirable slots in those schools' academically segregated honors, AP, and IB programs. Distinctions created here were between "good students" and "bad students" and parents employed highly individualistic notions of educational success. The findings suggest that even parents with progressive social values rely on school and academic segregation to secure valued resources for their children. Districts that value integration therefore must develop robust programs to counter the self-segregation of middle-class families.
- Subjects
MIDDLE class families; SCHOOL districts; SCHOOL choice; URBAN schools; SEGREGATION in education; SCHOOL children
- Publication
Qualitative Report, 2021, Vol 26, Issue 3, p808
- ISSN
1052-0147
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.46743/2160-3715/2021.4641