AERA Open (Apr 2023)

Going the Distance: Disparities in Pre-K Enrollment in Higher-Quality Schools by Geographic Proximity, Race/Ethnicity, Family Income, and Home Language

  • Meghan McCormick,
  • Mirjana Pralica,
  • JoAnn Hsueh,
  • Christina Weiland,
  • Amanda Ketner Weissman,
  • Anna Shapiro,
  • Samantha Xia,
  • Cullen MacDowell,
  • Samuel Maves,
  • Anne Taylor,
  • Jason Sachs

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/23328584231168867
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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This study leverages six years of public prekindergarten (pre-K) and kindergarten data (N = 22,469) from the Boston Public Schools (BPS) to examine enrollment in BPS pre-K from 2012–2017 for students from different racial/ethnic, socioeconomic, and linguistic groups. The largest differences in enrollment emerged with respect to race and ethnicity—and for enrollment in programs in higher-quality schools (defined as schools scoring in the top quartile on third-grade standardized tests)—with disparities increasing over time. Although there were no differences across groups in proximity to BPS pre-K programs in general, Black students lived about a quarter of a mile farther than their White peers from the nearest program in a higher-quality school, with gaps widening over time. Closer proximity was associated with a higher likelihood of enrollment in a program in a higher-quality school. Implications for future research and policy are discussed.