Parents' online school reviews reflect several racial and socioeconomic disparities in K-12 education
收藏DataCite Commons2025-04-29 更新2025-05-17 收录
下载链接:
https://www.openicpsr.org/openicpsr/project/130621/view
下载链接
链接失效反馈官方服务:
资源简介:
The files included on this page contain a description of the datasets that were used for this project, along with information about how access can be requested. They also contain the code repositories used to collect, prepare, and analyze the data.<br><br>The abstract for the paper is below:<br><br>Parents often select schools by relying on subjective assessments of quality made by other parents, which are increasingly becoming available through written reviews on school ratings websites. To identify relationships between review content and school quality, we apply recent advances in natural language processing to nearly half a million parent reviews posted for over 50,000 publicly-funded US K-12 schools on a popular ratings website. We find: i) schools in urban areas and those serving affluent families are more likely to receive reviews; ii) review language correlates with standardized test scores—which generally track race and family income—but not school effectiveness, measured by how much students improve in their test scores over time; and iii) the linguistics of reviews reveal several racial and income-based disparities in K-12 education. These findings suggest that parents who reference school reviews may be accessing, and making decisions based on, biased perspectives that reinforce achievement gaps.<br>
提供机构:
ICPSR - Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research
创建时间:
2021-01-14



