Abstract

The segregation of secondary school students into different schools has important implications for educational inequality, social cohesion and intergenerational mobility. Previous research has demonstrated how between-school segregation varies significantly across countries, with high levels of segregation occurring in central European nations that ‘track’ children into different schools and much lower levels in Scandinavia. This paper contributes to this literature by examining whether industrialised countries have made any progress in reducing levels of between-school segregation over time. Using six waves of data from the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), this work shows how the segregation of rich and poor students has remained broadly unchanged across OECD countries. This is despite major economic and political events occurring during this period, along with the introduction of numerous policy initiatives designed to reduce socioeconomic gaps. Therefore, the conclusions indicate that structural factors are likely to be the main drivers of between-school segregation (e.g. neighbourhood segregation or long-standing school admission policies) and that education policymakers may need to be much more radical if they are to foster greater levels of integration between the rich and the poor.

Highlights

  • The uneven distribution of students from different social classes across schools is a matter of concern to educational policymakers across the world

  • The analysis focuses upon the OECD nations only as (a) nonOECD members have tended to enter Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) post-2006, and have limited data available to consider trends over time and (b) some suffer from the problem of having a significant number of 15-year-olds who are no longer enrolled in school (Spaull 2019)

  • As long-lasting friendships and peer groups are developed during young people’s time in school, the extent of between-school segregation is a key indicator of whether particular social groups live in isolation from one another

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Summary

Introduction

The uneven distribution of students from different social classes across schools is a matter of concern to educational policymakers across the world. Schooling systems which tend to cluster students of low socioeconomic status together could be increasing educational inequality and reducing social mobility over time (Levaçić and Woods 2002). The extent of between-school segregation in an education system matters, with some believing that encouraging greater mixing of young people from different social backgrounds is key to reducing educational inequalities. Some scholars have even argued that socioeconomically segregated schools fail to prepare students for facing diversity (Massey and Fischer 2006) and may even be a threat to social cohesion (Gorard 2009; Mickelson and Nkomo 2012)

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