重新审视2021-22学年面对面学习中的种族差异

Q2 Social Sciences
Andrew Camp, Alison Johnson, Gema Zamarro
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These findings suggest a mismatch between Black families’ preferences and the options offered by their schools.KEYWORDS: COVID-19parental choiceracial gapsschooling modality AcknowledgmentsThe project described in this article relies on data from survey(s) administered by the UAS, which is maintained by the Center for Economic and Social Research at the University of Southern California. The content of this article is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of USC or UAS. The collection of the UAS COVID-19 tracking data is supported in part by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and by grant U01AG054580 from the National Institute on Aging, and many others.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementThe data that support the findings of this study are available with registration from the Understanding America Study at https://uasdata.usc.edu/.Notes1. The summer 2021 survey (UAS 348) was fielded from June 9th to July 21st, the fall 2021 survey (UAS 350) was fielded from September 23rd to October 31st, and the winter 2022 survey (UAS 351) was fielded from February 1st to March 30th.2. https://uasdata.usc.edu/index.php3. Importantly, the UAS research team provides internet access and hardware (e.g., tablets) to respondents who do not have computer hardware or internet access so all households in the panel may participate. Respondents receive compensation for their time spent answering questions at a rate of $20 per 30 minutes of interview time. The surveys are conducted both in English and Spanish.4. While the UCA averages 7,000 respondents per survey wave, we limit our analysis to those respondents with school-aged children in the household with resulting sample sizes between 1,225 and 1,458 individual respondents. 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In Appendix C, we show that our findings are robust to these changes in sample composition by performing our analysis with each specification limited to the most restricted analytic sample. In additional analyses, available upon request from the authors, we find evidence that within-wave sample attrition between model specifications is largely uncorrelated with respondent race or ethnicity indicating that the key relationships we study here are likely unaffected by this attrition.8. While we combine remote and hybrid learning for fall of 2021 into a single variable, we explore these as separate outcomes using a multinomial logit model following the logit specification described in the next section. Full results for this multinomial analysis are presented as average marginal effects in Appendix D.9. Due to sample size limitations, we include non-Hispanic AIAN, Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, and mixed-race individuals in this other race category.10. Detailed results from these factor analyses can be found in the technical Appendix A.11. As this is constructed from one question, we are unable to build the measure using factor analysis. Instead, we include this as a continuous variable with lower values indicating lower levels of trust.12. Comorbidities in the UCA survey include diabetes, cancer, heart disease, high blood pressure, asthma or a chronic lung disease, kidney disease, autoimmune disorders, and obesity.13. When both surveys were fielded, individuals aged 12 and up were eligible for vaccination.14. 45 respondents in the fall 2021 sample and 55 respondents in the winter 2022 sample indicated that their child attended a “virtual school” but did not differentiate between virtual schools operated by a public school district or charters. We exclude these individuals from our analysis.15. We are unable to include these controls for the summer 2021 analysis.16. https://uasdata.usc.edu/index.php17. Note that weights aligned to the characteristics of U.S households with K–12 or higher education students are not provided in the UAS. Provided sample weights bring the sample in line with the U.S. adult population.18. The summer survey did not ask respondents about their preference for remote or hybrid learning separately.19. We performed similar robustness checks by interacting race and ethnicity indicators with our measures of public health trust, media trust, and COVID-19 related comorbidities but did not find meaningful patterns.20. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

在2020-21学年,黑人学生比白人学生更不愿意亲自学习。我们研究这种差异是否随着大流行的发展而持续存在。我们发现,在2021 - 2022年,面对面学习的比例有所增加,但与白人学生相比,黑人学生的面对面学习比例仍然较低。虽然有几个因素有助于解释2020-21年观察到的学习方式的种族差异,但在2021-22年,只有模式提供仍然是一个重要的解释因素,在控制了提供和其他因素后,黑人-白人面对面学习差距仍然存在。这些发现表明,黑人家庭的偏好与学校提供的选择之间存在不匹配。本文描述的项目依赖于usas管理的调查数据,该调查由南加州大学经济与社会研究中心维护。本文的内容完全是作者的责任,并不一定代表USC或UAS的官方观点。无人机COVID-19跟踪数据的收集部分得到了比尔和梅林达·盖茨基金会以及国家老龄化研究所的U01AG054580赠款和许多其他机构的支持。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。数据可用性声明支持本研究结果的数据可在了解美国研究网站https://uasdata.usc.edu/.Notes1上注册获得。2021年夏季调查(UAS 348)于6月9日至7月21日进行,2021年秋季调查(UAS 350)于9月23日至10月31日进行,2022年冬季调查(UAS 351)于2月1日至3月30日进行。https://uasdata.usc.edu/index.php3。重要的是,UAS研究团队为没有电脑硬件或互联网接入的受访者提供互联网接入和硬件(例如平板电脑),以便小组中的所有家庭都可以参与。受访者在回答问题上所花费的时间会得到补偿,每30分钟的采访时间为20美元。调查是用英语和西班牙语进行的。虽然UCA平均每波调查有7000名受访者,但我们将分析限制在家庭中有学龄儿童的受访者,结果样本量在1225至1458名个人受访者之间。这一比例与美国有学龄儿童的家庭数量相当(https://www.census.gov/data/tables/2020/demo/families/cps-2020.html)5)。我们的样本包括任何居住在有孩子上K-12学校的家庭中的成年人,其中可能包括大家庭成员或成年兄弟姐妹。作为稳健性检查,我们重复了对夏季和秋季样本的分析,这些样本仅限于K-12学生的父母,这些样本来自附录B.6中单独的“我的家庭”调查。对于所有波浪中的少数家庭(15个),有多个回应,但没有主要受访者。对于这些情况,我们在每个家庭中随机选择每个学生的一个回答,并从我们的分析样本中排除其他人。在我们的整个分析过程中,我们的样本量由于调查回答中的一些缺失而发生了变化。在附录C中,我们表明,我们的发现是稳健的这些变化的样品组成通过执行我们的分析与每个规格限制在最受限制的分析样品。在作者要求提供的额外分析中,我们发现有证据表明,模型规格之间的波内样本损耗在很大程度上与被调查者的种族或民族无关,这表明我们在这里研究的关键关系可能不受这种损耗的影响。虽然我们将2021年秋季的远程学习和混合学习合并为一个变量,但我们使用多项式logit模型,按照下一节描述的logit规范,将这些作为单独的结果进行探索。这项多项分析的全部结果在附录D.9中以平均边际效应的形式呈现。由于样本量的限制,我们包括了非西班牙裔美国人、夏威夷人或太平洋岛民,以及其他种族的混血儿。这些因素分析的详细结果可在技术性附录A.11中找到。由于这是从一个问题构建的,我们无法使用因子分析来构建度量。相反,我们将其作为一个连续变量,其值越低表示信任水平越低。UCA调查的合并症包括糖尿病、癌症、心脏病、高血压、哮喘或慢性肺病、肾脏疾病、自身免疫性疾病和肥胖。当这两项调查都进行时,12岁及以上的人有资格接种疫苗。 2021年秋季样本中的45名受访者和2022年冬季样本中的55名受访者表示,他们的孩子上的是“虚拟学校”,但没有区分公立学区或特许学校运营的虚拟学校。我们把这些人排除在我们的分析之外。我们无法将这些控制因素纳入2021年夏季分析。https://uasdata.usc.edu/index.php17。请注意,UAS中没有提供与K-12或高等教育学生的美国家庭特征相一致的权重。如果样本的重量使样本与美国成年人口一致。夏季调查没有单独询问受访者对远程学习或混合学习的偏好。我们通过将种族和民族指标与我们的公共卫生信任、媒体信任和COVID-19相关合并症的测量方法相互作用,进行了类似的稳健性检查,但没有发现有意义的模式。完整的结果可向作者索取。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Revisiting Ethnic Differences in In-Person Learning During the 2021-22 School Year
ABSTRACTDuring the 2020–21 school year, Black students were less likely to learn in person than white students. We examine whether this difference persisted as the pandemic progressed. We find that the rate of in-person learning increased in 2021–22 but remained lower for Black students compared to white students. While several factors helped explain observed racial differences in learning modality in 2020–21, only modality offerings continued to be an important explanatory factor in 2021–22 and a Black-white in-person learning gap persisted after controlling for offerings and other factors. These findings suggest a mismatch between Black families’ preferences and the options offered by their schools.KEYWORDS: COVID-19parental choiceracial gapsschooling modality AcknowledgmentsThe project described in this article relies on data from survey(s) administered by the UAS, which is maintained by the Center for Economic and Social Research at the University of Southern California. The content of this article is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of USC or UAS. The collection of the UAS COVID-19 tracking data is supported in part by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and by grant U01AG054580 from the National Institute on Aging, and many others.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Data availability statementThe data that support the findings of this study are available with registration from the Understanding America Study at https://uasdata.usc.edu/.Notes1. The summer 2021 survey (UAS 348) was fielded from June 9th to July 21st, the fall 2021 survey (UAS 350) was fielded from September 23rd to October 31st, and the winter 2022 survey (UAS 351) was fielded from February 1st to March 30th.2. https://uasdata.usc.edu/index.php3. Importantly, the UAS research team provides internet access and hardware (e.g., tablets) to respondents who do not have computer hardware or internet access so all households in the panel may participate. Respondents receive compensation for their time spent answering questions at a rate of $20 per 30 minutes of interview time. The surveys are conducted both in English and Spanish.4. While the UCA averages 7,000 respondents per survey wave, we limit our analysis to those respondents with school-aged children in the household with resulting sample sizes between 1,225 and 1,458 individual respondents. This proportion is comparable with the number of American households with school-aged children (https://www.census.gov/data/tables/2020/demo/families/cps-2020.html)5. Our sample includes any adult living in a household with a child in K-12 schooling which may include extended family members or adult siblings. As a robustness check, we repeat our analyses for summer and fall samples restricted to parents of K-12 students as identified from the separate “My Household” survey in Appendix B.6. For a small number of households (15) across all waves, there were multiple responses but no primary respondent. For these cases, we randomly select only one response per student in each household and wave and exclude the others from our analytic sample.7. Throughout our analysis our sample size changes due to some missingness in survey responses. In Appendix C, we show that our findings are robust to these changes in sample composition by performing our analysis with each specification limited to the most restricted analytic sample. In additional analyses, available upon request from the authors, we find evidence that within-wave sample attrition between model specifications is largely uncorrelated with respondent race or ethnicity indicating that the key relationships we study here are likely unaffected by this attrition.8. While we combine remote and hybrid learning for fall of 2021 into a single variable, we explore these as separate outcomes using a multinomial logit model following the logit specification described in the next section. Full results for this multinomial analysis are presented as average marginal effects in Appendix D.9. Due to sample size limitations, we include non-Hispanic AIAN, Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, and mixed-race individuals in this other race category.10. Detailed results from these factor analyses can be found in the technical Appendix A.11. As this is constructed from one question, we are unable to build the measure using factor analysis. Instead, we include this as a continuous variable with lower values indicating lower levels of trust.12. Comorbidities in the UCA survey include diabetes, cancer, heart disease, high blood pressure, asthma or a chronic lung disease, kidney disease, autoimmune disorders, and obesity.13. When both surveys were fielded, individuals aged 12 and up were eligible for vaccination.14. 45 respondents in the fall 2021 sample and 55 respondents in the winter 2022 sample indicated that their child attended a “virtual school” but did not differentiate between virtual schools operated by a public school district or charters. We exclude these individuals from our analysis.15. We are unable to include these controls for the summer 2021 analysis.16. https://uasdata.usc.edu/index.php17. Note that weights aligned to the characteristics of U.S households with K–12 or higher education students are not provided in the UAS. Provided sample weights bring the sample in line with the U.S. adult population.18. The summer survey did not ask respondents about their preference for remote or hybrid learning separately.19. We performed similar robustness checks by interacting race and ethnicity indicators with our measures of public health trust, media trust, and COVID-19 related comorbidities but did not find meaningful patterns.20. Full results are available upon request from the authors.
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来源期刊
Journal of School Choice
Journal of School Choice Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
2.20
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