Assari Shervin, Zare Hossein
Marginalized-Related Diminished Returns (MDRs) Research Center, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Department of Family Medicine, Charles R Drew University of Medicine and Science, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Open J Educ Res. 2025;5(1):1-12. doi: 10.31586/ojer.2025.1160. Epub 2025 Jan 24.
School characteristics - including poverty levels, teacher experience, graduation rates, and college enrollment - are essential determinants of students' academic outcomes and long-term success. Families often use their socioeconomic resources, such as parental education and household income, to secure access to high-quality schools with favorable attributes. However, Minorities' Diminished Returns (MDRs) theory suggests that Black families may not experience the same benefits of high family SES due to structural barriers. This study examines the association between family SES and school characteristics, focusing on racial disparities in access to high-quality educational environments.
To investigate the relationship between family SES (parental education and household income) and multiple school characteristics (poverty, teacher experience, graduation rates, and college enrollment), and to assess racial differences in these associations.
Data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, a national sample of US adolescents, was analyzed. We used multivariate regression models to examine associations between family SES and school characteristics and to test for interactions by race, specifically comparing Black and White adolescents.
Higher family SES was associated with positive school characteristics overall, including lower school poverty, greater teacher experience, and increased graduation and college enrollment rates. However, these positive effects of high family SES on school characteristics were significantly weaker for Black adolescents than for White adolescents. Black adolescents from high-income families were more likely than White adolescents from similar backgrounds to attend schools with higher poverty rates, less experienced teachers, and reduced graduation and college enrollment rates.
Our findings highlight persistent racial inequities in access to educational opportunities, even among families with comparable socioeconomic resources. The diminished returns of family SES for Black adolescents underscore the role of structural barriers in limiting access to high-quality schools. These findings emphasize the need for policy interventions to address systemic inequalities that hinder Black families from fully leveraging their SES to access favorable educational environments.
学校特征——包括贫困水平、教师经验、毕业率和大学入学率——是学生学业成绩和长期成功的重要决定因素。家庭通常会利用其社会经济资源,如父母教育程度和家庭收入,来确保进入具有良好属性的优质学校。然而,少数群体收益递减(MDR)理论表明,由于结构性障碍,黑人家庭可能无法获得与高家庭社会经济地位相同的益处。本研究考察了家庭社会经济地位与学校特征之间的关联,重点关注获得优质教育环境方面的种族差异。
探讨家庭社会经济地位(父母教育程度和家庭收入)与多种学校特征(贫困、教师经验、毕业率和大学入学率)之间的关系,并评估这些关联中的种族差异。
对来自美国青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究的全国青少年样本数据进行了分析。我们使用多元回归模型来检验家庭社会经济地位与学校特征之间的关联,并按种族检验相互作用,特别对比了黑人和白人青少年。
总体而言,较高的家庭社会经济地位与积极的学校特征相关,包括较低的学校贫困率、更丰富的教师经验以及更高的毕业率和大学入学率。然而,高家庭社会经济地位对学校特征的这些积极影响在黑人青少年中明显弱于白人青少年。来自高收入家庭的黑人青少年比背景相似的白人青少年更有可能进入贫困率更高、教师经验较少、毕业率和大学入学率较低的学校。
我们的研究结果凸显了在获得教育机会方面持续存在的种族不平等,即使在社会经济资源相当的家庭中也是如此。黑人青少年家庭社会经济地位的收益递减凸显了结构性障碍在限制进入优质学校方面的作用。这些发现强调需要采取政策干预措施来解决系统性不平等问题,这些不平等阻碍了黑人家庭充分利用其社会经济地位来获得良好的教育环境。