1. Black Students and High School Completion in Quebec and Ontario: A Multivariate Analysis.
- Author
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Livingstone, Anne‐Marie and Weinfeld, Morton
- Subjects
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HIGH school graduation rates , *BLACK people , *EDUCATIONAL attainment , *ACHIEVEMENT gap , *EDUCATION , *EDUCATIONAL outcomes - Abstract
The paper contributes to the literature on black students and racial disparities in high school completion in Canada and makes original use of the 2006 Census to analyze the educational attainment of 18- to 19-year-olds in Ontario and Quebec. Results of a logistic regression indicate that in both provinces, black/white disparities in graduation rates disappear when income, family structure, language, gender, and place of residence are taken into account. Higher rates of socioeconomic disadvantage among black children pose challenges for high school completion. These findings do not imply that racism has no impact; indeed, the paper concludes that high school completion may not be the outcome most suitable for evaluating the effects of racism on educational attainment. Future studies should examine the causes of racial disparities in intermediate outcomes of school success (i.e., grades, special education placement, academic tracking, and disciplinary sanctions), and their effects on the graduation rates and postsecondary pathways of black students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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