Abstract

Numerous studies have demonstrated a negative relationship between community violence and youth academic achievement, but they have varied in their geographic definition of “community,” especially as it relates to proximity to students’ residences. We extend this by considering the independent relationships between academic achievement and violent events (from 911 dispatches; e.g., gun shots) at the neighborhood (i.e., census tract) and street-block levels. We use data from standardized Math and English Language Arts (ELA) tests from Boston, MA for 2011–2013. Exposure to community violence was partially independent between streets and tracts, with some students living on low-crime streets in high-crime neighborhoods or high-crime streets in low-crime neighborhoods. Initial regression models found that differences in a neighborhood’s violent crime predicted up to a 3% difference in test scores on both Math and ELA tests. Students living on high-crime streets scored an additional 1% lower than neighbors on safer streets. Subsequent models with student-level fixed effects, however, eliminated these relationships, except for the effect of neighborhood-level violence on Math scores. These findings suggest that future work should consider community violence at both geographic scales, but that in this case the impacts were only consistent at the neighborhood level and associations at the street level were seemingly due to spatial segregation of households.

Highlights

  • Exposure to community violence can have substantial deleterious impacts on student academic achievement [e.g., 1–4], highlighting how much where one lives can matter

  • The current study presents an initial effort to simultaneously consider how violent crime at the street and neighborhood levels relates to the academic achievement of the youth living there

  • About three-quarters (77%) of students were living in poverty, and 42% were either currently or formerly in English-Language Learning (ELL) programs

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Summary

Introduction

Exposure to community violence can have substantial deleterious impacts on student academic achievement [e.g., 1–4], highlighting how much where one lives can matter. Academic achievement and “community” violence through the Boston Public Schools’ Application to Conduct Research in the Boston Public Schools form (https://www.bostonpublicschools.org/Page/ 6172)

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