学校图书馆员的公平差距:与种族和民族相关的不公平,再加上贫困、地区和入学率

Q2 Social Sciences
K. Lance, D. Kachel, Caitlin Gerrity
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引用次数: 1

摘要

学校图书馆员调查——衰落还是进化?根据国家教育统计中心的数据,(SLIDE)项目是一项由联邦政府资助的研究,研究2015年至2019年间,全国学校图书馆员的全职同等人数下降了近20%。在该项目原始研究的更新中,对12537个学区2020-2021学年的学校图书管理员就业数据进行了检查,并与学区特征(贫困、地区和学区入学人数)和学生人口统计数据(种族和民族)相关联。数据支持了之前的研究结果,即获得学校图书馆员的机会与种族和族裔密切相关,对于生活在极端贫困、更孤立的地区和最小的地区的学生来说,这种情况会进一步加剧——在这些地区,学生不太可能获得大城市地区可用的教育资源。2021学年,大多数非白人地区的300万学生没有任何图书馆员;在新冠肺炎大流行期间,在所有地区没有图书馆员的560万学生中,他们占54%。在拥有“图书馆特权”的地区,学生与没有图书馆员的地区之间的差距继续扩大。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The School Librarian Equity Gap: Inequities Associated with Race and Ethnicity Compounded by Poverty, Locale, and Enrollment
ABSTRACT The School Librarian Investigation—Decline or Evolution? (SLIDE) project is a federally funded study of the almost 20% national decline in the number of full-time equivalents (FTEs) of school librarians between 2015 and 2019, according to the National Center for Education Statistics. In this update to the project’s original research, school librarian employment data for the 2020-2021 school year were examined for 12,537 school districts and associated with district characteristics (poverty, locale, and district enrollment) and student demographics (race and ethnicity). Data supported previous findings that access to school librarians is strongly related to race and ethnicity and further exacerbated for students living in extreme poverty, in more-isolated locales, and in the smallest districts—locales where students are less likely to have access to the educational resources available in large urban areas. In school year 2021, 3 million students in majority nonwhite districts were without any librarians; they were 54% of the 5.6 million students in all districts without any librarians during the COVID-19 pandemic. The gap between students in districts with a “library privilege” and those without librarians continues to widen.
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来源期刊
Peabody Journal of Education
Peabody Journal of Education Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
43
期刊介绍: Peabody Journal of Education (PJE) publishes quarterly symposia in the broad area of education, including but not limited to topics related to formal institutions serving students in early childhood, pre-school, primary, elementary, intermediate, secondary, post-secondary, and tertiary education. The scope of the journal includes special kinds of educational institutions, such as those providing vocational training or the schooling for students with disabilities. PJE also welcomes manuscript submissions that concentrate on informal education dynamics, those outside the immediate framework of institutions, and education matters that are important to nations outside the United States.
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