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ERIC ED536677: Is Demography Still Destiny? Neighborhood Demographics and Public High School Students' Readiness for College in New York City. A Research and Policy Brief PDF

2012·6.5 MB·English
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BRONX Is Demography MANHATTAN Still Destiny? QUEENS Neighborhood Demographics and Public High School Students’ Readiness BROOKLYN for College in New York City BRONX A RESEARCH AND POLICY BRIEF MANHATTAN QUEENS BROOKLYN ? Y N I T S ABOUT THE ANNENBERG INSTITUTE FOR SCHOOL REFORM E D L The Annenberg Institute for School Reform (AISR) is a national policy-research and reform-support organiza- L I T tion, affiliated with Brown University, that focuses on improving conditions and outcomes for all students in S Y urban public schools, especially those attended by traditionally underserved children. AISR’s vision is the H P transformation of traditional school systems into “smart education systems” that develop and integrate high- A R quality learning opportunities in all areas of students’ lives – at school, at home, and in the community. G O M AISR conducts research; works with a variety of partners committed to educational improvement to build E capacity in school districts and communities; and shares its work through print and Web publications. Rather D S than providing a specific reform design or model to be implemented, AISR’s approach is to offer an array of I tools and strategies to help districts and communities strengthen their local capacity to provide and sustain high-quality education for all students. Written by Norm Fruchter Megan Hester Christina Mokhtar Zach Shahn b Editing Margaret Balch-Gonzalez Graphic Design Haewon Kim The authors would like to acknowledge Leonard Rodberg for access to the Infoshare Community Information System – a computerized database that allows community groups, nonprofit organizations, and others to access demographic, health, and economic information about New York City at different geographic levels – and for assistance in identifying the overlap between New York City zip codes and neighborhoods. Suggested Citation: Fruchter, N. M, M. Hester, C. Mokhtar, and Z. Shahn. 2012. Is Demography Still Destiny? Neighborhood Demographics and Public High School Students’ Readiness for College in New York City. Providence, RI: Annenberg Institute for School Reform, Brown University. This publication is available online at: http://annenberginstitute.org/product/IsDemographyStillDestiny © 2012 Brown University, Annenberg Institute for School Reform (cid:1) Box 1985 Providence, Rhode Island 02912 (cid:1) 233 Broadway, Suite 720 New York, New York 10279 www.annenberginstitute.org Twitter: @AnnenbergInst Facebook: www.facebook.com/AnnenbergInstituteForSchoolReform Is Demography Still Destiny? Neighborhood Demographics and Public High School Students’ Readiness for College in New York City Summary college, while nearly 80 percent of Other policies that would begin to students from Tribeca do. address these gaps are: D uring the past decade, the • In the city’s neighborhoods with • Create a more equitable distribu- Bloomberg administration has 100 percent Black and Latino res- tion of in-school guidance and explicitly prioritized narrowing the idents, no more than 10 percent counseling resources to help fami- racial achievement gap. Former of high school students graduate lies successfully navigate the Chancellor Joel Klein has often ready for college. school choice maze. argued, “neither resources nor • In the Manhattan neighborhoods • Significantly increase the number demography is destiny in the class- with the highest college-readiness of educational-option seats to room,” and the New York City rates, fewer than 10 percent of the ensure that students of all aca- residents are Black or Latino. demic levels and all neighbor- Department of Education has • Eighteen of the twenty-one hoods have a fair shot at seats in invested heavily in school choice to neighborhoods with the lowest the high schools that are most achieve this goal, remaking the high college-readiness rates are in the likely to prepare them for college. school choice system to increase the Bronx (the other two are in • Invest heavily in school improve- scope and equity of student assign- Brooklyn). ment strategies, rather than just ment to high school. Yet a new • Thirteen of the fifteen neighbor- school creation and choice, to study by the Annenberg Institute for hoods with the highest college- increase the capacity of existing School Reform at Brown University readiness rates are in Manhattan schools to prepare students for indicates that the college readiness (the other two are in Queens). college. of New York City high school gradu- In spite of the city’s efforts to Without such comprehensive efforts, ates is still very highly correlated increase equity by expanding high the vast disparity in opportunity that with the neighborhood they come school choice and creating five hun- separates the city’s neighborhoods from. In particular, the racial compo- dred new small schools and one will persist. sition and average income of a stu- hundred charter schools, college dent’s home neighborhood are very readiness rates are still largely pre- strong predictors of a student’s dicted by the demographics of a stu- chance of graduating high school dent’s home neighborhood. This ready for college. The gaps between suggests that the strategies of school neighborhoods are enormous: choice and school creation are not • Only 8 percent of students from sufficient to create the equity that Mott Haven graduate ready for the administration has envisioned. Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University 1 Introduction the nation’s most comprehensive sys- each of the three groups, while the Y? tem of high school choice on equity other half were randomly assigned N O I ver the past decade, Mayor of opportunity for the system’s high by computer. Edward R. Murrow, T S Michael Bloomberg has reor- school students. Our findings sug- Murray Bergtraum, and Norman E D ganized the New York City school gest that while high school choice Thomas High Schools were subse- L L system using principles and strategies may have improved educational quently opened as educational option I T S extrapolated from his corporate sec- options for individual students, schools in the 1970s and employed HY tor experience. The mayor and his choice has not been sufficient to the same selection criteria. P A administration have restructured the increase systemic equity of opportu- R These large ed-op schools expanded G public school system into a portfolio nity. Our results indicate that univer- O the equity dimensions of choice by M district centered on choice, auton- sal high school choice has not attracting a diverse mix of students DE omy, and accountability. These disrupted the relationship of demog- ranging from academically strug- S strategies have been promoted as the raphy to educational destiny across I gling to high achieving. In the fol- most effective and efficient way to the city’s struggling neighborhoods. lowing decades, more ed-op high reduce the school system’s substantial schools were created and other high racial achievement gap and improve Evolution of High School schools added discrete ed-op pro- the quality of education for all the Choice grams, significantly expanding the city’s students. As a consequence, T New York City’s restructuring effort he New York City school sys- has been replicated in districts across tem has developed the nation’s Choice has not been sufficient the country, and the New York City most comprehensive system of high 2 to increase systemic equity of school system is often defined as the school choice. In the century since nation’s foremost exemplar of a port- Stuyvesant High School was opened opportunity. folio district. as a citywide choice school, students’ selection of high schools (and high After a decade of implementation, range and equity of high school schools’ selection of students) has a variety of student, school, and choice offerings. These ed-op become an almost universal process.1 system-level outcomes offer a win- schools and programs represent an dow into the successes and shortcom- High school choice in New York early form of controlled school ings of New York City’s portfolio City has expanded and grown more choice by offering placements within district reforms. This research brief complex as efforts to extend the designated schools to a mix of stu- examines one aspect of the impact of scope and quality of student choice dents with varying academic abilities. have alternated with efforts to create In the mid-1980s, the creation of an equitable mix of students within Central Park East Secondary School 1Stuyvesant High School began restricting schools. In the late 1960s, John as a high school of choice helped admission based on academics in 1919. In Dewey High School opened as the 1972, the New York State legislature linked it initiate a wave of small high school first educational option (or “ed-op”) with the Bronx High School of Science and development, pioneered by New high school. Dewey offered place- Brooklyn Technical High School and man- Visions for Public Schools and the ments to students categorized into dated admission to those three schools to Center for Collaborative Education students with the highest scores on a special three admissions groups – high, low, and supported by the Aaron Dia- citywide test. Five additional high schools and average achievers – according to mond Foundation. Through these were subsequently added to this elite cate- their citywide reading test scores. gory of specialized schools by the New York initiatives, in the early 1990s some Dewey selected half the students in City Department of Education during the thirty-five new small high schools of Bloomberg administration. choice were developed. An equiva- lent number of new small high schools were developed as part of testing experts Howard Everson and “Neither resources nor demogra- the New York Networks for School Daniel Koretz (2010) showing that Renewal, the Annenberg Founda- phy is destiny in the classroom” students who reach these bench- tion’s New York City Challenge marks are significantly more likely ––Joel Klein grantee, in the mid-1990s. These to earn at least a C in a college-level efforts considerably expanded the course in that subject. universe of high school choice. improve the high school selection (cid:1)Methods process was to ensure that demogra- Starting in 2002, the Bloomberg phy was not destiny for the city’s In 2011, the New York City Depart- administration, supported by grants high school students. As the econo- ment of Education (NYCDOE) from the Bill & Melinda Gates mists who developed the high school released data on college readiness Foundation, Carnegie Corporation, choice matching process observed in indicators for each New York City and the Open Society Institute, a journal article about the new high school, as an additional measure greatly intensified the pace of small process, of school performance on the NYC- high school creation. The adminis- DOE’s Annual Progress Reports. But tration also recalibrated the high One impetus for increasing school choice process. Under school choice was to make sure former Schools Chancellor Joel students who lived in disadvan- Klein, the process was refined to taged neighborhoods were not 2New York State’s definition of college readi- ness, based strictly on Regents scores, is increase the number of individual automatically assigned to disad- called the Aspirational Performance Meas- schools each student could select, vantaged schools. (Abdulka- ure. For the purposes of this analysis, we and the selection process was diroglu, Pathak & Roth 2005, p. have used the NYCDOE’s more expansive improved by using a computer- 364) College Readiness Index, which is defined as driven algorithm similar to the the percentage of students who graduate formula that matches teaching hospi- High School Choice and with a Regents diploma, earn a 75 or higher tals and medical student interns to Demography/Destiny on the English Regents or score 480 or higher on the Critical Reading SAT, and earn an 80 pair students’ choices with schools’ B or higher on one Math Regents and complete selections. ut has the high school choice coursework in Algebra II/Trigonometry or a system succeeded in breaking higher-level math subject, or score 480 or As a result, the percentage of stu- the link between demography and higher on the Math SAT. A student can dents placed in one of their top destiny? The analysis in this brief demonstrate completion of math coursework choices of high school has increased begins to address that question. by: (a) Passing a course in Algebra II/ every year since 2009. In 2011, for Trigonometry or higher and taking one of example, 83 percent of high school In 2010 the New York State Educa- the following exams: the Math B Regents, applicants were matched with one tion Department developed a set of Algebra II/ Trigonometry Regents, AP Calcu- of their five top choices. Mayor indicators to assess student capacity lus, AP Statistics, or IB Math; or (b) Passing the Math B or Algebra II/Trigonometry Bloomberg and former Chancellor to succeed in college, based on stu- Regents. We used this metric because it was Klein frequently linked their school dent performance on Regents exams the latest data available at the time of our reform efforts to the goals of the civil and CUNY assessment tests. If stu- analysis. rights movement; for example, in dents pass the Math Regents exam 2009 Klein proclaimed that “neither with a score of at least 80 and the resources nor demography is destiny English Regents exam with a score of in the classroom.” One of the goals at least 75, they are now defined by of the administration’s efforts to New York State as college ready.2 This metric is based on research by Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University 3 because the choice system often sev- scores of all the city’s public high No single neighborhood factor Y? ers the connection between students’ school students, broken down by the N I home neighborhoods and the high students’ residential zip code. AISR was as strongly associated T S schools they attend (since students amalgamated the student data for E D with college readiness as racial/ choose schools throughout the city), individual zip codes into a citywide L IL the data did not connect the demo- neighborhood index3and then car- ethnic composition. T S graphics of students’ neighborhood ried out a series of analyses to assess Y H residence with their college readiness the relationship between students’ P A scores to assess the extent to which residential neighborhood demo- (cid:1)Findings R G neighborhood demographics are graphic factors4and students’ college O AISR’s analysis found that several M associated with students’ college readiness scores, aggregated up to E neighborhood socio-economic fac- D readiness rates. the neighborhood level. tors, such as single motherhood, S I In 2011, researchers at the Annen- AISR used an online data tool, devel- extent of mother’s education, unem- berg Institute for School Reform oped by the Infoshare Community ployment rate, and citizenship status, (AISR) at Brown University Information Service, to merge U.S. were significantly correlated with requested and received data from Census data, primarily neighborhood students’ college readiness rates. the NYCDOE on the high school indicators by New York City zip For example, the higher the average graduation and college readiness code, with the college readiness mother’s level of education in any scores by students’ residential zip New York City neighborhood, the code provided by the NYCDOE. To higher the college readiness scores 4 3We use Infoshare’s definition of a New aggregate from the zip code to the of the students residing in that York City neighborhood: “one of 292 neighborhood level, we used data neighborhood. Conversely, the neighborhoods in which New Yorkers gener- provided by Infoshare that specifies higher a neighborhood’s percentage ally think of themselves as residing” the overlap of neighborhoods and of single mothers, the lower the col- (www.infoshare.org). zip codes. Whenever neighborhood lege readiness scores of students liv- boundaries did not coincide with ing in that neighborhood. The mean 4These residential neighborhood demo- those of zip codes, we used 2009 income level in each neighborhood graphic factors were culled from the U.S. Census tract populations, broken Census 2005–2009 American Community Sur- was particularly strongly correlated down by the Census tracts in each vey averages for New York City. The five-year with students’ college readiness averages are the most reliable, have the zip code and neighborhood, to calcu- scores – the lower a neighborhood’s largest sample size, and are best used when late the proportion of the neighbor- mean income, the lower the college examining Census tracts and small areas hood’s population that comes from readiness scores of the students living such as neighborhoods. each zip code. We assigned each in that neighborhood. neighborhood a college readiness No single neighborhood factor was score that represents the weighted as strongly associated with college average of the college readiness readiness as racial/ethnic composi- scores of those zip codes that overlap tion. The strongest negative rela- with the neighborhood. We used tionship to students’ college the same procedures for any demo- readiness scores was the percentage graphic variable we converted to the of Black and Latino residents in the neighborhood level. city’s neighborhoods – the higher the percentage of Black and Latino resi- dents in specific neighborhoods, the lower the college readiness scores of the high school graduates (in 2011) in those neighborhoods. Figure 1, with all the city’s neighborhoods represented by circles, illustrates this very strong negative log-linear relationship. The relationship between the two variables – students’ college readi- ness scores and the racial composi- FIGURE 1 Proportion of Black and Latino neighborhood residents vs. college readiness tion of neighborhoods across New York City – is remarkably tight. When we examined the relationship 80 of other demographic factors (e.g., income, single motherhood, citizen- ship status) to college readiness rates, 60 we could identify several outliers – y d neighborhoods that broke the pat- ea e r tern. But the very strong relationship g e between race and college readiness coll nt 40 yielded only one neighborhood e c er (Woodlawn –see Figure 2 on next P page) as a possible outlier, and this is explained by unusual population pat- 20 terns in the neighborhood. Figure 2 shows that no more than 10 percent of the high school students -3.0 -2.5 -2.0 -1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0.0 in the Bronx neighborhoods of Mor- log(Proportion Black or Latino) risania, Woodstock, Longwood, Claremont, and Mott Haven gradu- ated high school college ready in 2011. These neighborhoods with low college readiness rates have the high- est percentages of Black and Latino residents in New York City. In fact, eighteen of the twenty-one neigh- borhoods with the lowest college readiness rates are in the Bronx, the borough with the highest percentage of Black and Latino residents. Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University 5 Conversely, as Figure 3 shows, 74 Y? percent or more of the high school N I students in more advantaged Man- T S hattan neighborhoods such as E D Tribeca, Little Italy, Soho, and L FIGURE 2 L Lenox Hill graduated college ready TI New York City high schools with lowest college readiness rates S in 2011. All four of these Manhattan Note high percentages of Black and Latino neighborhood residents Y H neighborhoods with very high col- P A College Black/Latino* lege-ready rates have 10 percent or R G Neighborhood Borough Readiness (%) (%) less Black and Latino residents. An O M East New York Brooklyn 12 96 analysis of graduate rates showed a E D Ocean Hill Brooklyn 12 99 similar negative log-linear associa- S tion with the proportion of Blacks I North Baychester Bronx 12 93 and Latinos in the neighborhood Edenwald Bronx 12 93 populations. But there was more Melrose Bronx 12 100 variation in graduation rates than Hunt's Point Bronx 12 100 college readiness rates among neigh- borhoods with the most Black and East Tremont Bronx 12 98 Latino residents, indicating that Mount Hope Bronx 11 98 there is more equity in opportunity Bathgate Bronx 11 95 for high school outcomes than for 6 Brownsville Brooklyn 11 100 college readiness. Crotona Park Bronx 11 99 Given that only 13 percent of the Port Morris Bronx 11 96 city’s Black and Latino students East Concourse Bronx 11 100 currently graduate high school pre- pared for college, compared with Wakefield Bronx 11 83 50 percent of White students and Mount Eden Bronx 11 99 50 percent of Asian students,5these Morrisania Bronx 10 100 findings are not surprising. Yet it is Woodstock Bronx 10 100 quite sobering that despite efforts to Longwood Bronx 10 100 improve the high school choice sys- tem to increase educational opportu- Claremont Bronx 10 100 nities for the city’s students, the Mott Haven Bronx 8 100 relationship between demography Woodlawn Bronx 8 52** and college readiness is so strong across the city’s neighborhoods. *Black/Latino refers to the proportion Black plus the proportion Latino, which can sometimes be more than 100 percent because some people identify as both. Where Because the college-ready indicator percentages added up to more than 100, we rounded to 100. is so new, it has not been possible to **Woodlawn, which has a large White population, shares a zip code with Eastchester, construct comparisons to determine a neighborhood that is predominately Black. There are disproportionately more whether the relationship between Black high school students in this zip code, so its low college readiness rate reflects the characteristics of Eastchester. neighborhood demographics and college readiness has changed across time. Thus our analysis is very time- limited – a snapshot based on one year of data. However, because the relationship between race and out- comes demonstrated in Figure 1 could hardly be more tight, it is not likely to have lessened significantly in recent years. FIGURE 3 In a broadside that former Chancel- New York City high schools with highest college readiness rates lor Klein and Michelle Rhee pub- Note low percentages of Black and Latino neighborhood residents lished in 2010, they declared, “The College Black/Latino single most important factor deter- Neighborhood Borough Readiness (%) (%) mining whether students succeed in Tribeca Manhattan 79 9 school is not the color of their skin Little Italy Manhattan 77 10 or their ZIP code or even their par- ents’ income – it is the quality of Soho Manhattan 74 9 their teacher.” Yet our findings indi- Lenox Hill Manhattan 74 6 cate that ZIP code, income, and, Douglaston & Little Neck Queens 74 13 above all, the racial composition City Hall Manhattan 71 12 of students’ neighborhoods is very strongly correlated with student Upper East Side Manhattan 70 8 success. Chinatown Manhattan 68 16 In spite of the NYCDOE’s efforts to Yorkville Manhattan 66 9 enhance both the extent of selectivity World Trade Center Manhattan 66 9 and the equity of high school choice, Battery Park Manhattan 66 9 demography is still – and quite Oakland Gardens Queens 65 15 relentlessly – destiny in terms of the Bellevue Area Manhattan 65 13 relationship between neighborhood race/ethnicity and college readiness Turtle Bay Manhattan 65 8 across the city’s public school system. West Village Manhattan 65 11 Universal high school choice seems not to have provided equity of out- comes for the city’s high school students. 5According to the NYCDOE School-Level Regents-Based Math/ELA Aspirational Per- formance Measure (2010), which is the only college readiness metric provided that is bro- ken down by race. See http://schools.nyc. gov/NR/rdonlyres/193BBD8A-5DE1-4EEE- B49B-C8C45357441B/0/Graduation_Rates _Public_School_Apm.xls. Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University 7 Exploring the Causes Corcoran and Levin discovered that found that even given the students’ Y? of the Choice/ the average number of high school tendency to choose schools that N I Demography Link choices students made varied signifi- matched their own backgrounds: T ES cantly by the middle school they Students’ first-choice schools are D W hat might help to explain attended. After controlling “for stu- on average more advantaged and L IL these disturbing results? dent characteristics (e.g., achieve- less racially isolated than stu- T S Sean Corcoran and Henry Levin’s ment, race, poverty) and residential dents’ middle schools . . . [but] Y H (2011) comprehensive analysis of the area,” the authors observed “sizable students’ final school assignment P A city’s high school choice system pro- middle school effects on choices” is more similar to the students’ R G vides some suggestions. Corcoran (p. 212). Efforts by the New York feeder school. (p. 218) O M and Levin found that under the City Coalition for Educational Jus- E Thus, student preferences for D Bloomberg administration, educa- tice (2007, 2008) have demonstrated schools that match their back- S tional option program offerings, that patterns of inequity in middle I grounds, combined with the opera- which control school choice to school curricula, as well as disparities tion of the matching process increase equity of student opportu- in resources such as teacher quality formula, tend to assign students to nity, have significantly diminished. and student support, are associated schools more similar to their middle Unscreened programs, in which stu- with low student achievement in the schools than the schools they dents are randomly selected by com- city’s middle schools. Given Corco- selected as their first choice. puter, with priority given to those ran and Levin’s finding of “sizable who attend a school open house or middle school effects,” research Corcoran and Levin acknowledge information session, have signifi- efforts should assess whether pre- in their study that the Bloomberg 8 cantly increased. Researchers need to dictable disparities in guidance- administration has improved the examine the equity implications of counselor-to-student ratios in middle choice system’s transparency and these policy changes. schools are shaping these effects on equity. If there is a cost, they suggest, high school choice.6 it lies in the system’s increased com- plexity and the administration’s neu- Corcoran and Levin (2011) also “Students’ first-choice schools are trality: “The DOE has shifted the found: burden of a complex choice decision on average more advantaged and Students tended to prefer high onto students, their parents, and schools that matched their own less racially isolated than students’ schools.” They conclude: academic, racial, and socioeco- Whether or not this shift middle schools . . . [but] students’ nomic background. . . . These improves academic outcomes . . . patterns suggest that universal final school assignment is more will depend on how students and choice will be limited in its ability their families make school similar to the students’ feeder to prevent stratification of stu- choices. If demand is relatively dents across schools by race, school.” insensitive to academic quality socio-economic status, and aca- and more responsive to location ––Sean Corcoran and Harry Levin, demic ability. (pp. 214–215) and/or social influences, even a “School Choice and Competition in the New York City Schools” But Corcoran and Levin also fair system of choice will fail to observed a pattern of disparity provide an impetus for academic between students’ first choice of high improvement. Moreover, to the school, students’ middle schools, and the high schools students were ulti- mately assigned to. Essentially, they

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