DO TEACHERS RACE, GENDER, AND ETHNICITY MATTER - EVIDENCE FROM THE NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL LONGITUDINAL-STUDY OF 1988

Citation
Rg. Ehrenberg et al., DO TEACHERS RACE, GENDER, AND ETHNICITY MATTER - EVIDENCE FROM THE NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL LONGITUDINAL-STUDY OF 1988, Industrial & labor relations review, 48(3), 1995, pp. 547-561
Citations number
18
Categorie Soggetti
Industrial Relations & Labor
ISSN journal
00197939
Volume
48
Issue
3
Year of publication
1995
Pages
547 - 561
Database
ISI
SICI code
0019-7939(1995)48:3<547:DTRGAE>2.0.ZU;2-X
Abstract
Using data from the National Educational Longitudinal Study of 1988 (N ELS), the authors find that the match between teachers' race, gender, and ethnicity and those of their students had little association with how much the students learned, but in several instances it seems to ha ve been a significant determinant of teachers' subjective evaluations of their students. For example, test scores of white female students i n mathematics and science did not increase more rapidly when the teach er was a white woman than when the teacher was a white man, but white female teachers evaluated their white female students more highly than did white male teachers.