American Educational Research Journal | 2019

Standing Out and Sorting In: Exploring the Role of Racial Composition in Racial Disparities in Special Education

 

Abstract


Schools differentially sort students into special education by race, though researchers debate the extent to which this is caused by racist school practices versus variation in student need due to other racial inequalities. I test the interaction between school-level racial composition and student-level race as a predictor of special education receipt. I find that as the proportion of White students increases, the risk of lower-status disabilities, such as intellectual disability, increases for Black, Latinx, and Native American students. As the proportion of White students decreases, White students’ risk of higher-status disabilities, such as speech/language impairment, increases relative to students of color. Thus, in the context of racial distinctiveness, student race becomes salient to sorting into special education.

Volume 56
Pages 2573 - 2608
DOI 10.3102/0002831219847966
Language English
Journal American Educational Research Journal

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