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Magnet Schools and Sheff vs. O’Neill Presentation for the Hartford Public Schools by Hambisa Goso, Erik Jefferson, Kerry Kincy, Chris Olenoski, and Sam.

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Presentation on theme: "Magnet Schools and Sheff vs. O’Neill Presentation for the Hartford Public Schools by Hambisa Goso, Erik Jefferson, Kerry Kincy, Chris Olenoski, and Sam."— Presentation transcript:

1 Magnet Schools and Sheff vs. O’Neill Presentation for the Hartford Public Schools by Hambisa Goso, Erik Jefferson, Kerry Kincy, Chris Olenoski, and Sam Zivin, with Professor Jack Dougherty Trinity College, Hartford CT April 25, 2007

2 Part 1: Racial composition of magnet schools and Sheff settlement goals Part 2: Interviews with prospective parents at magnet school fairs

3 According to the Sheff legal settlement of 2003, all parties agreed to a goal of 30% of Hartford minority students in desegregated school settings by June 2007

4 22 magnets currently open, 2006-07

5 Source: CT State Dept. Ed Are We Meeting the Sheff Goal?

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9 *based on prior year Choice data

10 Are We Meeting the Sheff Goal?*based on prior year Choice data Even if all magnet enrollments were counted, still would not reach 30% goal Project Choice enrollments have not risen to 1600, the projected level in 2003 settlement

11 Are We Meeting the Sheff Goal? *estimate Progress toward the Sheff settlement goal of 30% by June 2007

12 Magnet School Fair Interviews

13 Research Questions: 1) What motivates parents to consider magnet schools relative to other choices? 2) How do parents construct ideas about the purpose and quality of magnet schools? 3) What sources of information and social networks do these parents rely upon? 4) How do parental motivations, ideas, and networks vary across demographic groups? Magnet School Fair Interviews

14 Research Methods: Interviews with 126 prospective magnet parents attending 3 HPS magnet fairs in January - February 2007 Magnet School Fair Interviews

15 Research Methods: Interviews with 126 prospective magnet parents attending 3 HPS magnet fairs in January - February 2007 Magnet School Fair Interviews Community partner Delores Bolton, HPS Assistant Supt for Magnet Schools

16 Research Methods: Interviews with 126 prospective magnet parents attending 3 HPS magnet fairs in January - February 2007 Magnet School Fair Interviews Fair at Breakthrough Magnet School, January 2007

17 Research Methods: Interviews with 126 prospective magnet parents attending 3 HPS magnet fairs in January - February 2007 Magnet School Fair Interviews Fair at Breakthrough Magnet School, January 2007

18 Transcribed, coded, and analyzed interview data Magnet School Fair Interviews

19 Demographic summary of parents in this sample *We did not interview every parent at the magnet fair, nor should this sample be generalized to the larger pool of all magnet applicants

20 Claim 1: Race Does not Affect “Push” or “Pull” Motivations in this sample We coded parent motivations for considering a magnet school: –“push” away from current school –“pull” toward magnet school –both –neither

21 Claim 1: Race Does not Affect “Push” or “Pull” Motivations in this sample We coded parent motivations for considering a magnet school: –“push” away from current school –“pull” toward magnet school –both –neither

22 Claim 2: More parents motivated by educational opportunity than diversity in this sample Regardless of race, magnet fair parents were more likely to mention educational opportunities as their motivation (39%, or 49 out of 126), compared to diversity (1%, or 6 out of 126) Of the White parents, only 1 out of 24, acknowledged diversity as their motivation, in comparison to 5 out of 102 minority parents

23 Claim 3: Urban Parents Rely More Upon Current Schools for Magnet Information than Suburban Parents 34% (23/67) Urban parents rely on current schools 21% (12/57) Suburban parents rely on current schools Typical urban parent responses: –“I got a flyer from school” or “School counselor” Suburban parents rely more upon social networks

24 Claim 4: Several Parents Perceive Magnet Schools as Different from “Public” Schools Typical parent: “I’m just trying to find an alternative to public school in Hartford” The population lacks a clear vocabulary for two types of public schools: magnets and neighborhood schools

25 Claim 4: Several Parents Perceive Magnet Schools as Different from “Public” Schools Typical parent: “I’m just trying to find an alternative to public school in Hartford” The population lacks a clear vocabulary for two types of public schools: magnets and neighborhood schools Some magnet school promotional literature contributes to this confusion by associating magnets with “private” schools

26 Claim 5: Some Parents Concerned with Recently “Magnetized” Neighborhood Schools HPS neighborhood schools recently converted into magnets: Kinsella, Hooker, Annie Fisher, Simpson-Waverly, Noah Webster Typical parent comments: – “I don’t know what they are going to offer different”... –“When it was a troubled elementary school, [boom] it turned into a magnet school…”

27 Members of the Ed 309 seminar at Trinity, Spring 2007 Back (L to R): Hambisa Goso, Heather Moore, Erik Jefferson, Chris Olenoski, Ernie Laden; Middle: Dora Turjan, Gloribel Gonzalez, Ashley Clackson, Jen Shouldice, Kerry Kincy, Sam Zivin; Front: Elysha Padilla, Mari Zigas, Jason Haber. Not pictured: Noelle Bessette and Professor Jack Dougherty

28 Additional information available on the Cities, Suburbs, and Schools website www.trincoll.edu/depts/educ/CSS


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