学校规模对家长参与和社会资本的影响:来自ELS的证据;2002

T. Dee, Wei Ha, B. Jacob
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引用次数: 21

摘要

一种日益突出的学校改革方法强调创建小型学校可能带来的好处。支持者认为,在促进学生成绩方面,小型学校比大型学校更有效,这在很大程度上是因为它们对学生和教职员工的参与和社会互动有积极影响。本文的分析探讨了小型学校的另一个潜在的独特影响:学生家长对学校的参与程度提高,以及在更大的社区中促进社会资本。我们提出了新的实证证据,证明公立高中的规模是否会影响家长参与和社会资本的测量。这一分析是基于最近的2002年教育纵向研究(ELS:2002)的基准年的全国代表性数据。除了进行标准的多变量分析外,我们还试图通过使用与较小学校和较大学校相关的父母之间观察到的特征差异来建立学校规模因果效应的界限,作为其潜在的未观察到的混淆特征的大小和方向的指导。这里提出的结果提供了初步证据,证明小型学校在促进家长参与学校和更广泛的社区活动方面更有效。我们发现,在农村社区,规模较小的高中不仅增加了家长参加家长教师协会活动和学校志愿者的可能性,而且还促进了一些社会资本指标(例如其他家长的知识和社区认同)。然而,我们在郊区社区没有发现这样的证据。不幸的是,在我们的数据中,城市社区的小型学校太少了,我们不能说太多关于学校规模在这些背景下的影响。作为一个整体,我们的结果表明,小型学校可能对我们考虑的结果有一些有益的影响,但也可能存在农村社区特有的文化或经济特征,这些特征限制了这些结果在其他地区的外部有效性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Effects of School Size on Parental Involvement and Social Capital: Evidence from the ELS: 2002
An increasingly prominent approach to school reform emphasizes the possible benefits of creating smaller schools. Proponents argue that small schools are more effective than large schools at promoting student achievement, in large part because they have positive effects on the engagement and social interactions of students and staff. The analysis presented here explores another potentially distinct effect of small schools: the enhanced involvement of students’ parents in the school and the promotion of social capital in the larger community. We present new empirical evidence on whether the size of public high schools influences measures of parental involvement and social capital. This analysis is based on nationally representative data from the base year of the recent Education Longitudinal Study of 2002 (ELS:2002). In addition to conducting standard multivariate analyses, we attempt to establish bounds on the causal effects of school size by using the differences in observed traits across parents connected to smaller and larger schools as a guide to the size and direction of their potentially confounding unobserved traits. The results presented here provide tentative evidence that small schools are more effective in promoting parental involvement in schools as well as engagement in the broader community. We find that in rural communities smaller high schools not only increase the probability that parents take part in parent-teacher association activities and volunteer at the school but also promote some measures of social capital (for example, knowledge of other parents and community identification). However, we find no such evidence in suburban communities. Unfortunately, there are so few small schools in the urban communities in our data that we cannot say much about the influence of school size in these contexts. Taken as a whole, our results suggest that there may be some beneficial effects of small schools on the outcomes we consider, but there may also be cultural or economic features unique to rural communities that limit the external validity of these results for other areas.
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