Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Beth E. Schueler is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Beth E. Schueler.


Sociology Of Education | 2015

Do Differences in School Quality Matter More Than We Thought? New Evidence on Educational Opportunity in the Twenty-first Century

Jennifer L. Jennings; David Deming; Christopher Jencks; Maya Lopuch; Beth E. Schueler

Do schools reduce or perpetuate inequality by race and family income? Most studies conclude that schools play only a small role in explaining socioeconomic and racial disparities in educational outcomes, but they usually draw this conclusion based solely on test scores. We reconsider this finding using longitudinal data on test scores and four-year college attendance among high school students in Massachusetts and Texas. We show that unexplained differences between high schools are larger for college attendance than for test scores. These differences are arguably caused by differences between the schools themselves. Furthermore, while these apparent differences in high school effectiveness increase income disparities in college attendance, they reduce racial disparities. Social scientists concerned with schools’ role in transmitting inequality across generations should reconsider the assumption that schools either increase or reduce all disparities and should direct attention to explaining why high schools’ effects on specific outcomes and groups of students appear to vary so much.


Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis | 2017

Can States Take Over and Turn Around School Districts? Evidence From Lawrence, Massachusetts

Beth E. Schueler; Joshua Goodman; David James Deming

The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) requires states to identify and turn around struggling schools, with federal school improvement money required to fund evidence-based policies. Most research on turnarounds has focused on individual schools, whereas studies of district-wide turnarounds have come from relatively exceptional settings and interventions. We study a district-wide turnaround of a type that may become more common under ESSA, an accountability-driven state takeover of Massachusetts’s Lawrence Public Schools (LPS). A differences-in-differences framework comparing LPS to demographically similar districts not subject to state takeover shows that the turnaround’s first 2 years produced sizable achievement gains in math and modest gains in reading. We also find no evidence that the turnaround resulted in slippage on nontest score outcomes and suggestive evidence of positive effects on grade progression among high school students. Intensive small-group instruction over vacation breaks may have led to particularly large achievement gains for participating students.


Applied Developmental Science | 2016

Assessing Parent Perceptions of School Fit: The Development and Measurement Qualities of a Survey Scale

Sofía Bahena; Beth E. Schueler; Joe McIntyre; Hunter Gehlbach

Students whose school environment fits their developmental needs also typically experience academic success and increased motivation. Most investigations of school fit, which focus on teachers’ and students’ perceptions, have found a general decline in fit across the transition from elementary to middle school. However, little research has examined the school-child fit from the parent perspective. In this article, we first detail the development process behind a new survey measure of parent perceptions of school fit. Second, using three online panel-based samples of parents from across the country (n1 = 323, n2 = 188, n3 = 1,033), we evaluate the scales measurement properties and conduct exploratory analyses examining grade-level and income-based differences on reported school fit. Finally, in line with previous research, we find that parents of middle school children perceived statistically significantly worse fit than parents of elementary school children. Among parents of high school students, we found that, on average, high-income parents perceive statistically significantly better fit than low-income parents.


Psychological Assessment | 2014

Measuring Parent Perceptions of School Climate

Beth E. Schueler; Lauren Beth Capotosto; Sofía Bahena; Joe McIntyre; Hunter Gehlbach


National Bureau of Economic Research | 2016

Can States Take Over and Turn Around School Districts? Evidence from Lawrence, Massachusetts

Beth E. Schueler; Joshua Goodman; David James Deming


Educational Administration Quarterly | 2018

A Third Way: The Politics of School District Takeover and Turnaround in Lawrence, Massachusetts

Beth E. Schueler


School Community Journal | 2017

Measuring Parent Perceptions of Family-School Engagement: The Development of New Survey Tools.

Beth E. Schueler; Joe McIntyre; Hunter Gehlbach


National Bureau of Economic Research | 2017

School District Reform in Newark: Within- and Between-School Changes in Achievement Growth

Mark Chin; Thomas J. Kane; Whitney Kozakowski; Beth E. Schueler; Douglas O. Staiger


2017 APPAM Fall Research Conference | 2017

Individualized Math Instruction for Struggling Students

Beth E. Schueler


2016 Fall Conference: The Role of Research in Making Government More Effective | 2016

A Third Way? the Politics of School District Takeover and Turnaround in Lawrence, Massachusetts

Beth E. Schueler

Collaboration


Dive into the Beth E. Schueler's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

David Deming

National Bureau of Economic Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge