New National Study Finds Increasing School Segregation
After greatly increasing desegregation of public schools a generation
ago, the United States public education system is now steadily consolidating
a trend toward racial resegregation that began in the late 1980s, according
to a new study by The Civil Rights Project and researchers at the Harvard
Graduate School of Education. Ironically, this trend is occurring as the
nation becomes increasingly racially and ethnically diverse. Since 1968,
the student enrollment of Hispanics has increased by 218% and the enrollment
of African Americans has grown by more than a fifth, while white enrollment
has decreased by a sixth.
The study, Resegregation in American Schools, analyzes the latest data
from the National Center of Education Statistics' Common Core of
Education Statistics, and examines changes in racial composition in American
schools, national patterns of segregation, the relationship between segregation
by race and schools experiencing concentrated poverty, the difference
in segregation in different regions and types of school districts, and
the extent and segregation of multiracial schools. The report concludes
with a discussion of policies that could help reverse the trends toward
intensifying segregation. It was conducted by Gary Orfield, Professor
of Education and Social Policy and Co-Director of The Civil Rights Project,
and John Yun, a doctoral candidate at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
Key findings of the study include:
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Rapidly Increasing Segregation in the South
The region of the country that is resegregating at the fastest rate
is the South, which has achieved the highest levels of racially integrated
schools in the country for 25 years. The percentage of black students
in majority white schools in the South fell from a peak of 43.5% in
1988 to 34.7% in 1996.
-
Increasing Segregation in States with Substantial Black Enrollment
Virtually all states with substantial black enrollments increased
integration during the 1970's, but showed a rise in segregation
between 1980 and 1996. The largest increases in segregation occurred
in Rhode Island (20%), Wisconsin (13%), Florida (12%), Oklahoma (12%),
Maryland (9%), Delaware (9%), and Massachusetts (9%).
-
Severest Segregation Occurring in Latino Communities
Latinos, who are fast becoming the largest minority group in the country,
attend the most severely segregated schools. Latino segregation has
been increasing ever since data was first collected in the 1960s but
the issue has not received much attention since the great increase
occurred after the civil rights era. Data from 1996-1997 shows that
74.8% of Latinos attend schools with over 50% minority student population,
an increase from 64.3% in 1968-1969; 35.4% of Latinos attend schools
with over 90% minority student population, an increase from 23.1%
from 1968 to 1969. The Northeast continues to be the most segregated
region for Latinos, with 78.2% of Latinos attending schools with over
50% minority student population, and 46% attending schools with over
90% minority population. The West, where Latinos are the dominant
minority group, has a substantial increase in segregation and now
has 77% of Latino children in predominantly minority schools.
-
Substantial Link Between Segregation by Race and Poverty
Segregation by race is very strongly related to segregation by class
and income. Racially segregated schools--for all groups except
whites--are almost always schools with high concentrations of
poverty. Almost nine-tenths of segregated African American and Latino
schools experience concentrated poverty. Students in segregated minority
schools were 11 times more likely to be in schools with concentrated
poverty than their peers in predominantly white schools. Black and
Latino students on average attend schools with more than twice as
many poor classmates as white students. Data from 1996-1997 shows
that in schools attended by the average black and Latino students,
42.7% and 46% of the students are poor, respectively. In schools attended
by the average white student, 18.7% of the students are poor. Poverty
levels are strongly related to school test score averages and many
kinds of educational inequality.
-
Growing Segregation Among Blacks and Latinos in Suburban Schools
While large numbers of Latinos and blacks are moving into the suburbs,
they remain heavily isolated in segregated schools within these communities,
particularly in metropolitan areas. Data from 1996-1997 shows that
blacks and Latinos living in these areas attend schools that have
an average nonwhite enrollment of between 60% and 64%.
-
Isolation of Whites
Whites remain most isolated from all other racial groups and are the
only racial group that attend schools where the overwhelming majority
of students are from their own race. Data from 1996-1997 shows that
on average, white students attend schools with classmates who are
81% white.
About The Civil Rights Project at Harvard University
The Civil Rights Project at Harvard is an interdisciplinary initiative
engaged in assessing the prospects for justice and equal opportunity under
the law for racial and ethnic minorities in the United States. The Project
collaborates with civil rights advocacy groups and scholars from universities
across the country. The Harvard Project on School Desegregation, which
issued previous reports on school desegregation levels, is now part of
The Civil Rights Project.
For More Information
Contact Gary Orfield at 617-496-4824 or Christine Sanni at 617-496-5873