Aaryn Ward
Louisiana State University



Does school matter for the low SES student? Investigating the causal effects of school context on college enrollment

FINAL REPORT:

This dissertation focuses on school context and the whether or not “good schools” matter for low SES students. Existing research and theory do not provide consistent expectations regarding the performance of low SES students in middle/high SES school environments. To untangle the relationship among socioeconomic background, the school setting, and educational outcomes, I use a large, longitudinal, nationally-representative dataset, The Education Longitudinal Survey of 2002 (ELS:2002) to analyze enrollment in postsecondary institutions, institutional selectivity, and future educational expectations. Models use weighted regression with causal effect estimators to assess a potential causal effect of “good schools” for low SES students. While analyses using a composite SES measure (education, occupation, and income) do not show a significant causal effect of middle/high SES schools on low SES students’ college enrollment, models utilizing parents’ education as a measure for social class show “good schools” to have a significant causal effect on level of postsecondary education attempted for students from lower class backgrounds. A causal effect for “good schools” also emerges when looking at the selectivity of four year postsecondary institutions. Policy suggestions include school choice through vouchers for low SES students. Research has shown that economic and housing segregation between high and low SES families negatively impacts educational attainment for low SES students (Mayer 2002; Fisher and Kmec 2004). As such, policy can suggest that not just school choice, but housing vouchers can have a positive impact for low SES families.




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