The black-white achievement gap, family-school links, and the importance of place

Authors
Citation
Vj. Roscigno, The black-white achievement gap, family-school links, and the importance of place, SOCIOL INQ, 69(2), 1999, pp. 159-186
Citations number
90
Categorie Soggetti
Sociology & Antropology
Journal title
SOCIOLOGICAL INQUIRY
ISSN journal
00380245 → ACNP
Volume
69
Issue
2
Year of publication
1999
Pages
159 - 186
Database
ISI
SICI code
0038-0245(199921)69:2<159:TBAGFL>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
African American students continue to drop out of school at a level higher than that of their White counterparts and perform lower, on average, in mat h and reading achievement. Research has documented influences at the family and school levels, yet little work has dealt with both simultaneously Equa lly important, few analyses acknowledge that family and school influences a re themselves embedded in, and partially a function of, broader structures and spatial variations in class- and race-based opportunity. I draw from th e restricted-use National Educational Longitudinal Survey and 1990 Census d ata in addressing these concerns. Findings suggest that disparities in fami ly background and educational resources influence racial gaps in achievemen t, and sometimes in an interrelated manner. These more proximate influences on achievement are, for all students, influenced by spatial patterns of ge neral, class-based opportunity. Notably, Black disadvantage is exacerbated even further in areas of high racial inequality. Thus, broader structures o f racial and class opportunity, rather than one or the other, are important determinants of educational stratification and achievement. Implications f or future research are discussed.