Publication | Open Access
Does high-stakes testing increase cultural capital among low-income and racial minority students?
30
Citations
39
References
2008
Year
EthnicityEducationIncrease Cultural CapitalRacial Minority StudentsHigh-stakes TestingRaceEducational EquityEducational PolicyEducational AccountabilityStudent CultureSociology Of EducationAfrican American StudiesCultural DiversityEducational DisadvantageRacial EquityCultural CapitalPublic PolicyEducational TestingEqual Educational OpportunityHigher EducationCultureAccountability PoliciesEducation Policy
This article draws on research from Texas and Chicago to examine whether high-stakes testing enables low-income and racial minority students to acquire cultural capital. While students' performance on state or district tests rose after the implementation of high-stakes testing and accountability policies in Texas and Chicago in the 1990s, several studies indicate that these policies seemed to have had deleterious effects on curriculum, instruction, the percentage of students excluded from the tests, and student dropout rates. As a result, the policies seemed to have had mixed effects on students' opportunities to acquire embodied and institutionalized cultural capital. These findings are consistent with the work of Shepard (2000), Darling-Hammond (2004a), and others who have written of the likely negative repercussions of high-stakes testing and accountability policies.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1