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Is School Choice Working for Marginalized Students?

Professor Katrina Bulkley is studying how school choice supports the varied and complex needs of students.

While 鈥渟chool choice鈥 can offer students the opportunity to attend schools 鈥 such as magnet and charter schools 鈥 other than local public schools, it is unclear whether current choice options are significantly improving education outcomes for disadvantaged students.

Counseling and Educational Leadership Professor Katrina Bulkley is a member of a core team of researchers from around the nation that has secured a $10 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Institute of Education Sciences to explore how school choice is working for minority, low-income, English-language learner, special education and other disadvantaged students. She has received part of $170,000 sub-award to support her work on the team鈥檚 five-year REACH (National Center for Research on Education Access and Choice) project.

鈥淭his center goes far beyond asking questions as to whether different forms of choice policies are good or bad,鈥 Bulkley says. 鈥淚nstead, we鈥檙e asking how school choice 鈥 alongside other changes in policies and practice 鈥 can best be utilized to support the varied and complex needs of students from historically marginalized populations.鈥

Katrina Bulkley

We鈥檙e asking how school choice 鈥 alongside other changes in policies and practice 鈥 can best be utilized to support the varied and complex needs of students from historically marginalized populations.鈥

Katrina Bulkley

While Bulkley is involved in the overall qualitative research in nationwide locations that connects with the project鈥檚 five 鈥減olicy levers鈥 鈥 planning and oversight, transportation, enrollment systems, information and teachers 鈥 she will focus specifically on the District of Columbia and Florida.

She is also co-leading the team鈥檚 study of the authorizers who approve and oversee charter schools. 鈥淪ince many charter schools serve students and families from critically underserved groups, understanding the role of authorizers overall and in serving these groups is especially important as the reach of charter schools grows.鈥 Bulkley notes that University students will be involved in analyzing charter school applications.

Bulkley expects the team will uncover specific contexts where choice is related to a positive impact on disadvantaged students. 鈥淔or example, high-quality authorizing practices may be connected to higher-quality schools,鈥 she explains.

After five years of study by REACH, Bulkley anticipates that, 鈥減olicy makers at all levels will have access to concrete research-based policy practices and that some of them will act on those recommendations.鈥