Not exact matches
Indeed, we find the majority of students in the central cities of metropolitan areas, in both charter and traditional
public schools, attend
school in intensely
segregated settings.
Our new findings demonstrate that, while segregation for blacks among all
public schools has been increasing for nearly two decades, black students in charter
schools are far more likely than their traditional
public school counterparts to be educated in intensely
segregated settings.
Studies are showing, for example, that black students in charter
schools are more likely than their counterparts in traditional
public schools to be educated in an intensely
segregated setting.