Abstract

In this study, we explore how high schools, through their structures and organization, may influence students’ decisions to stay in school or drop out. Traditional explanations for dropout behavior have focused on students’ social background and academic behaviors. What high schools might do to push out or hold students has received less empirical scrutiny. Using a sample of 3,840 students in 190 urban and suburban high schools from the High School Effectiveness Supplement of the National Educational Longitudinal Study of 1988, we apply multilevel methods to explore schools’ influence on dropping out, taking into account students’ academic and social background. Our findings center on schools’ curriculum, size, and social relations. In schools that offer mainly academic courses and few nonacademic courses, students are less likely to drop out. Similarly, students in schools enrolling fewer than 1,500 students more often stay in school. Most important, students are less likely to drop out of high schools where relationships between teachers and students are positive. The impact of positive relations, however, is contingent on the organizational and structural characteristics of high schools.

Highlights

  • Who should be held responsible when a student drops out of high school? there is much agreement among policymakers, researchers, and educators that adolescents should remain in high school until graduation, many young people leave before they complete high school

  • Using a sample of 3,840 students in 190 urban and suburban high schools from the High School Effectiveness Supplement (HSES) of the National Educational Longitudinal Study of 1988 (NELS):88 study, we use hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) methods to explore school effects on dropping out, once students’ academic and social background has been taken into account

  • How schools are organized in terms of social relations among school members has been shown to influence students’ engagement with school and the ultimate act of disengagement: dropping out

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Summary

Introduction

Who should be held responsible when a student drops out of high school? there is much agreement among policymakers, researchers, and educators that adolescents should remain in high school until graduation, many young people leave before they complete high school. The construct of risk, a characteristic of individuals, is common in studies of school dropouts (Natriello McDill, & Pallas 1990; Pallas 1989). Authors often divide this construct into two categories: academic and social risk. Students who are members of racial and ethnic minority groups drop out at higher rates than white students, as do those from low-income families, from single-parent households, and from families in which one or both parents did not complete high school (Rumberger 1987; Natriello et al 1990)

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