Paper Summary
Share...

Direct link:

Priced Out of Opportunity: How California's Housing Burden Impacts School Segregation and Black Student Achievement (Poster 22): SIG-Research Focus on Black Education, Stage 1, 6:04 PM

Thu, April 24, 5:25 to 6:55pm MDT (5:25 to 6:55pm MDT), The Colorado Convention Center, Floor: Exhibit Hall Level, Exhibit Hall F - Stage 1

Abstract

California's high housing costs and lack of affordable housing in affluent school districts lead low-income Black children to attend racially and socioeconomically segregated schools. Local policies and NIMBY attitudes limiting affordable housing in desirable neighborhoods perpetuate Black-White opportunity gaps. Grounded in critical race theory and the education debt model, this study used panel data regression to document relationships between housing affordability, Black-White segregation, and Black-White sixth-grade-level performance in math, English, and combined standardized tests. Findings indicate that a lack of affordable housing correlates with increased Black-White school segregation. As segregation increases, overall and math achievement disparities increase but fall by 13% and 21% if segregation decreases by one standard deviation. Hence, housing affordability directly contributes to test score gaps.

Author