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Brian J. Zikmund-Fisher
Carnegie Mellon
Julian Jamison
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Jennifer Tennant
Ithaca College
Sophie Prunier-Poulmaire
Université Paris Ouest Nanterre La Défense
Jean-Baptiste Berry
National Institute of Statistics and Economic Studies
Philippe Askenazy
CNRS
Jeremy Tobacman
University of Pennsylvania
Paige Marta Skiba
Vanderbilt University
Neil Bhutta
Federal Reserve Board

Chandra Muller, a sociologist at the University of Texas, as co-authored a new article in the latest issue of Social Forces. Funded by an award from the Russell Sage Foundation, Muller's study examines school stratification in new and established immigrant destinations. Here is the abstract:

The growth and geographic diversification of the school-age Latino population suggest that schools in areas that previously had very few Latinos now serve many of these students. This study uses the 1999-2000 Schools and Staffing Survey and the Education Longitudinal Study of 2002 to compare public high schools in new and established Latino destinations. We examine school composition, school quality indicators, instructional resources and access to advanced math courses. We find that schools in new destinations display more favorable educational contexts according to a number of measures, but offer fewer linguistic support services than schools in established destinations. We also find evidence of a within-school Latino-white gap in advanced math course taking in new destinations, suggesting greater educational stratification within schools in those areas.