"这是机会,不是选择":华盛顿特区的黑人家庭、择校和郊区化

Alisha Butler, B. Quarles
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摘要

公共教育改革,如扩大择校范围,已成为重塑城市景观的关键杠杆。这些改革通常旨在吸引和留住城市学校中的富裕家庭和白人家庭,因此学者们研究了这些家长如何应对为子女选择这些学校所带来的风险。本文对这一学术研究进行了扩展,以了解其他家庭如何在绅士化的环境中体验这些改革。我们的问题是:(1) 黑人家长如何在城市化和扩张的教育市场中进行择校?(2) 黑人家长对学校教育的看法如何影响他们的择校方法?(3) 家长的地位(如性别、阶级、地方归属感和在城市的居住时间)如何影响他们的经历?我们利用定性荟萃分析设计,汇集了华盛顿特区三项分别进行的绅士化研究的数据。在本次分析中,我们以 34 位黑人家长的择校经历为中心。我们从批判性空间理论和种族理论的角度重新分析了数据。我们特别关注参与者对地方的依恋、他们对自己选择的看法、参与者看重的学校和社区属性以及他们是如何引导择校的。家长在选择学校时考虑了学校和社区的各种特征。在寻找学校的过程中,黑人家长做出了一系列种族妥协,以便为孩子找到他们认为在种族、身体和社会方面安全的学校。例如,家长们将他们对学术严谨性的渴望与他们对学校社会氛围的看法以及他们对学校的种族平权和包容性的看法进行了协商。地点和空间对家长选择学校至关重要。学校的地理位置和安全感影响着家长是否将学校视为孩子的可行选择。我们的研究强调了制约选择集构建的多重因素。重要的是,黑人家长在择校过程中的经历表明,广阔的教育市场为他们提供了 "机会而非选择 "的优质教育机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
“It’s a Chance, Not a Choice”: Black Families, School Choice, and Gentrification in Washington, D.C.
Public education reforms, such as expanded school choice, have become a critical lever for remaking urban landscapes. These reforms often aim to attract and retain affluent and White families in urban schools, so scholars have examined how these parents navigate the perceived risk of choosing these schools for their children. This paper extends this scholarship to understand how other families experience these reforms in gentrifying landscapes. We ask: (1) How do Black parents navigate school selection in a gentrifying and expansive education marketplace? (2) How do Black parents’ perceptions of schooling shape their approach to school selection? (3) How do parents’ positionalities (e.g., gender, class, place attachments, and tenure in the city) influence their experiences? We leverage a qualitative meta-analysis design that pools data from three separately conducted studies of gentrification in Washington, D.C. For this analysis, we center on 34 Black parents’ experiences as they navigate school selection. We reanalyzed data through the lens of critical spatial and racial theories. We paid particular attention to participants’ attachments to place, their perceptions of their choices, the school and neighborhood attributes participants valued, and how they navigated school selection. Parents considered a broad range of school and neighborhood characteristics as they constructed their choice sets. As they searched for schools, Black parents made a series of racialized compromises to find schools they perceived to be racially, physically, and socially safe for their children. Parents, for example, negotiated their desire for academic rigor with their perception of schools’ social climates and their perceptions that schools would be racially affirming and inclusive. Place and space were essential to parents’ choice set construction. Schools’ physical locations and perceptions of safety influenced whether parents viewed schools as viable options for their children. Our study underscores the multiple factors that bound choice set construction. Critically, Black parents’ experiences as they navigated school selection suggest that the expansive educational marketplace offered a “chance, not a choice” at high-quality educational opportunities.
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