According to the report released by UCLA on New
York public school segregation, «the extreme share of black students enrolled in intensely segregated schools have steadily increased.»
Not exact matches
New
York City can do much more to address deep
segregation in its
public schools, such as using more magnet grants to attract a diverse group of parents to segregated
schools or moving ahead with an admissions plan aimed at lowering
segregation on the Lower East Side, according to a new report.
Mayor Bill de Blasio's plan for increasing
school diversity, released on June 6, is a much - needed response to
segregation in New
York City
public schools.
New
York State did not actively encourage racial
segregation in the Yonkers
public schools and therefore bears no financial responsibility for remedying the problem, a federal judge ruled last week.
Based on our research and our own understanding as New
York City
public school parents, we encourage the DOE to shift its focus away from highly competitive, market - based
school choice policies, such as charter
schools, which consistently lead to greater racial
segregation and a winner - take - all mentality.
Indeed a hot topic this year has been the spotlight on the severe economic and racial
segregation within New
York City
Public Schools (NYCPS).
NEW
YORK — New
York City Councilmembers, charter and district
school leaders and parent activists convened tonight in Brooklyn for a first - of - its - kind panel to confront the
segregation crisis in New
York City
public schools.
Hosted by NYC Collaborates, «Diverse
Schools: Opportunities and Challenges in Integrating NYC's
Public Schools» discussed the historical roots of
school segregation; these continue to play out across New
York — even over 60 years after Brown v Board of Education - as well as the current challenges our
school system faces and actionable solutions to spur integration.
NYC
SCHOOL SEGREGATION The 74: How NYC's Top Boys & Girls Are Sorting Themselves Into Different Schools Chalkbeat: How school choice differs for black and white families in New York City NYT: First Test for New York Chancellor: A Middle School Desegregation Plan WNYC: New Jersey's Public Schools Remain Overwhelmingly Segr
SCHOOL SEGREGATION The 74: How NYC's Top Boys & Girls Are Sorting Themselves Into Different Schools Chalkbeat: How school choice differs for black and white families in New York City NYT: First Test for New York Chancellor: A Middle School Desegregation Plan WNYC: New Jersey's Public Schools Remain Overwhelmingly Segr
SCHOOL SEGREGATION The 74: How NYC's Top Boys & Girls Are Sorting Themselves Into Different
Schools Chalkbeat: How
school choice differs for black and white families in New York City NYT: First Test for New York Chancellor: A Middle School Desegregation Plan WNYC: New Jersey's Public Schools Remain Overwhelmingly Segr
school choice differs for black and white families in New York City NYT: First Test for New York Chancellor: A Middle School Desegregation Plan WNYC: New Jersey's Public Schools Remain Overwhelmingly Segr
school choice differs for black and white families in New
York City NYT: First Test for New
York Chancellor: A Middle
School Desegregation Plan WNYC: New Jersey's Public Schools Remain Overwhelmingly Segr
School Desegregation Plan WNYC: New Jersey's Public Schools Remain Overwhelmingly Segr
School Desegregation Plan WNYC: New Jersey's
Public Schools Remain Overwhelmingly Segregated
Although systems of
school choice are imagined as tools for eliminating
school segregation, the New
York City
public high
school choice system that was redesigned in 2003 was not created with diversity in mind (Abdulkadiroglu, Pathak, & Roth).