Discretion and Disproportionality: Explaining the Underrepresentation of High-Achieving Students of Color in Gifted Programs
Discretion and Disproportionality: Explaining the Underrepresentation of High-Achieving Students of Color in Gifted Programs
 
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AERA Open
January 19, 2016

Jason A. Grissom, Vanderbilt University
Christopher Redding, Vanderbilt University

Abstract

Students of color are underrepresented in gifted programs relative to White students, but the reasons for this underrepresentation are poorly understood. We investigate the predictors of gifted assignment using nationally representative, longitudinal data on elementary students. We document that even among students with high standardized test scores, Black students are less likely to be assigned to gifted services in both math and reading, a pattern that persists when controlling for other background factors, such as health and socioeconomic status, and characteristics of classrooms and schools. We then investigate the role of teacher discretion, leveraging research from political science suggesting that clients of government services from traditionally underrepresented groups benefit from diversity in the providers of those services, including teachers. Even after conditioning on test scores and other factors, Black students indeed are referred to gifted programs, particularly in reading, at significantly lower rates when taught by non-Black teachers, a concerning result given the relatively low incidence of assignment to own-race teachers among Black students.

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News Coverage
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Stark differences in black and white enrollment for District 150 gifted programs
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Study Finds Black Students Are Often Overlooked by Gifted, Talented Programs
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The Washington Post, January 21, 2016

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Washington Monthly, January 19, 2016

Study finds racial discrimination in school gifted programs
Chalkbeat Tennessee, January 19, 2016

Study: White students favored over blacks in gifted programs
AJC, January 19, 2016

Further Research Finds Lack of Teacher Diversity Negatively Impacts Minority Students
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Vanderbilt report: Black kids underrepresented in gifted programs
The Tennessean, January 19, 2016

Bright black students taught by black teachers are more likely to get into gifted-and-talented classrooms
The Hechinger Report, January 19, 2016

Why Are There So Few Black Children in Gifted Programs?
The Atlantic, January 19, 2016

Bright Black Students With Black Teachers More Likely to Get Into Gifted Programs
U.S. News & World Report, January 19, 2016

Morning Education: GIFTED GAPS
Politico, January 19, 2016

STUDY: Despite Same Test Scores, Whites More Likely Than Blacks to Enter Gifted Student Programs
Education Writers Association, January 19, 2016

 
 
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