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The role of noncontiguous attendance zones in shaping school populations: A case study of Tucson, Arizona and Fort Bend, Texas

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.32.8302

Keywords:

school attendance zones, school segregation, demographic change, case study

Abstract

Noncontiguous school attendance zone boundaries (AZBs) have a unique, relatively uncommon shape that assign two or more non-adjacent residential areas to the same school. Given their ability to shape school enrollments by taking advantage of residential sorting, noncontiguous AZBs have historically been linked to explicit efforts to both segregate and desegregate schools. In this paper, we use a novel, longitudinal dataset of AZBs and descriptive quantitative and geospatial methods to understand how the relationship between noncontiguous zones, school diversity, and neighborhood demographics changed from 1990-2020 in two southwestern school districts—Tucson Unified School District, Arizona and Fort Bend Independent School District, Texas. Each district has a unique legal history and demographic context that informs their use of noncontiguous AZBs. We find noncontiguous AZBs are more strongly associated with racially diverse schools and are more likely to bring together neighborhoods with different compositions in Tucson compared to Fort Bend. However, the association between Tucson’s noncontiguous AZBs and racially diverse schools has waned since 1990, as the district has negotiated the end of its court-ordered desegregation plan. Our findings provide insight into when and how noncontiguous AZBs can effectively contribute to ethnoracially diverse schools.

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Author Biographies

Sarah Asson, The Pennsylvania State University

Sarah Asson is a recent PhD graduate of the Education Policy Studies Department at The Pennsylvania State University. Her research interests include patterns of segregation and inequality in K-12 schools as well as policy and legal solutions to foster true integration.

Ruth Krebs Buck, The Pennsylvania State University

Ruth Krebs Buck is a PhD candidate in the Department of Geography at The Pennsylvania State University studying geographies of education, neighborhoods, and the politics of boundary delineation. Ruth received her MS in geography from Penn State in 2022 and her BA from Macalester College in 2018 with a geography major and a data science minor. Prior to graduate school, she worked as a researcher in the MGGG Redistricting Lab at Tufts University.

Hope Bodenschatz, University of California, Davis

Hope Bodenschatz is an incoming transportation technology and policy PhD student at the University of California, Davis. Previously, she was a senior research assistant in the New England Public Policy Center of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. Hope graduated from The Pennsylvania State University in 2021 with an MA and BS in economics and BAs in geography and political science.

Erica Frankenberg, The Pennsylvania State University

Erica Frankenberg is professor of education and demography and Director of the Center for Education and Civil Rights at The Pennsylvania State University. Her research interests focus on racial desegregation and inequality in PK-12 schools, and the connections between school segregation and other federal, state, and metropolitan policies.

Christopher S. Fowler, The Pennsylvania State University

Dr. Fowler is associate professor of geography and demography at The Pennsylvania State University. He examines how the geographical boundaries we choose for organizing our world shape what we observe. His research is focused primarily on issues of inequality; touching on access to education, racial and income segregation, access to health services, and political redistricting. He works closely with federal data infrastructure to insure quality geographic units for longitudinal and multi-scalar analyses and is particularly interested in how uncertainty in where boundaries are drawn can introduce bias into spatial analyses.

Published

2024-08-06

How to Cite

Asson, S., Krebs Buck, R., Bodenschatz, H., Frankenberg, E., & Folwer, C. (2024). The role of noncontiguous attendance zones in shaping school populations: A case study of Tucson, Arizona and Fort Bend, Texas. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 32. https://doi.org/10.14507/epaa.32.8302

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