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Working
Paper Series:
07.02
School Consolidation and Inequality
Christopher R. Berry
http://www.harrisschool.uchicago.edu/faculty/web-pages/christopher-berry.asp
Abstract:
One of the most remarkable yet least remarked upon accomplishments in
American public education in the twentieth century is the success of the school
consolidation movement. Between 1930 and 1970, 9 out of every 10 school districts
were eliminated through consolidation. Nearly two-thirds of schools that existed as of
1930 were gone by 1970. The overall effect of these and related reforms was to transform
the small, informal, community controlled schools of the 19th century into centralized,
professionally run educational bureaucracies. The American public school system as we
know it was born during this brief, dynamic period. While school consolidation
represents arguably the most profound reform movement in 20th century education,
almost nothing is known about its consequences for students.
In earlier work on the consolidation movement (Berry and West, 2005), Martin
West and I found that students educated in systems with larger schools earned
significantly lower wages as adults. Like many others who have studied the relationship
between school attributes and student outcomes, we focused our attention on average
outcomes. However, there is good reason to suspect that school consolidation influenced
the variation in student outcomes as well. In particular, by dramatically cutting the
number of schools and districts, consolidation reduced an important source of betweenschool
and between-district variation in educational quality. At the same time, however,
consolidation was motivated by a desire to increase instructional specialization, which
could be achieved by substantially increasing the size of schools and districts. Thus,
within-school and within-district variation in education quality may have risen as schools
and districts became larger and instruction more specialized. This paper investigates the
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relationship between changes in school and district size and variation in student
outcomes, as measured by adult wage inequality.
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