机会的成本:高资源环境下的反黑人歧视。

Journal of biomedical and life sciences Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Epub Date: 2024-11-19 DOI:10.31586/jbls.2024.1128
Shervin Assari, Hossein Zare
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:儿童教育成果(包括阅读能力、学校歧视和学校纪律行为)在不同教育儿童机会指数(COI)水平的邮政编码中存在不平等。本研究探讨种族与教育环境对儿童教育成果的交互作用。我们假设种族、父母教育及其相互作用与感知到的学校歧视有关,这反过来又降低了他们的认知、学业和情感健康。我们还假设高社会经济地位(SES)的黑人儿童在高coi环境中报告了高感知学校歧视。方法:数据来自青少年大脑认知发展(ABCD)研究,该研究测量了广泛的教育、认知和情感结果。同时,ABCD儿童在COI排名差异很大的地区进行抽样,可分为以下五类:教育COI非常高、高、平均、低和非常低。我们的结构方程模型(SEM)检验了种族和受教育程度对学校歧视感知的加性和交互效应,以及学校歧视对各种认知能力(阅读能力、图片词汇量、列表排序工作记忆)、休学和抑郁情绪的影响。我们的多组SEM评估了这些关系在不同教育COI水平上的变化。结果:我们的研究结果表明,高SES黑人儿童在高coi居住区的学校歧视程度最高。这是基于观察到种族和父母教育对学校歧视经历的相互作用仅在COI最高的地区显着。在不同COI水平的居民区中,经历过学校歧视的学生有更高的停学率、更严重的抑郁和更差的认知表现。结论:虽然较高的COI与更好的学习成绩相关,但在COI增加的作用中存在着黑人与白人之间的差距,这是通过儿童感知到的种族偏见的增加来实现的。这些发现强调了教育公平的复杂性,表明仅仅提高COI不足以消除学校经历中的种族差异。应该制定政策,减少在高COI环境中对黑人学生的学校歧视。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Cost of Opportunity: Anti-Black Discrimination in High Resource Settings.

Objective: Inequalities exist in children's educational outcomes-including reading proficiency, school discrimination, and school disciplinary actions-across zip codes with different levels of educational childhood opportunity index (COI). This study examines the interaction between race and educational environment on children's educational outcomes. We hypothesize that race, parental education, and their interaction are associated with perceived school discrimination, which in turn reduces their cognitive, academic, and emotional wellbeing. We also hypothesize that Black children with high socioeconomic status (SES) report high perceived school discrimination in high-COI settings.

Methods: Data were drawn from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, which measures a wide range of educational, cognitive, and emotional outcomes. At the same time, the ABCD children are sampled across areas with vast differences in COI rankings, that can be classified into these five categories: very high, high, average, low, and very low educational COIs. Our structural equation models (SEM) tested the additive and interactive effects of race and educational attainment on perceived school discrimination, and the effects of school discrimination on various cognitive abilities (reading proficiency, picture vocabulary, and list sorting working memory), school suspension, as well as depressed mood. Our multi-group SEM assessed how these relationships vary across educational COI levels.

Results: Our findings showed that high SES Black children report highest school discrimination in residential areas with highest COIs. This is based on the observation that the interaction between race and parental education on experiences of school discrimination were only significant in areas with highest COI. Across residential areas with different COI levels, students who experienced higher school discrimination had higher suspension, worse depression, and worse cognitive performance.

Conclusion: While higher COIs are associated with better academic outcomes, Black-White gaps exist in the role of increased COI through increased racial bias that children perceive. These findings underscore the complexity of educational equity, suggesting that improving COI alone is insufficient for eliminating racial disparities in school experiences. Policies should be in place to reduce school-based discrimination against Black students in high COI settings.

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