Maternal Education and Exceptions to Florida's Mandatory Grade Retention Policy
Educational accountability policies are a popular tool to close the
achievement gaps between advantaged and disadvantaged students.
However, these policies may exacerbate inequality if families from
advantaged backgrounds are better able to advocate for their children
and thus circumvent policy.
This study investigates this possibility in the
context of the early grade retention policy in Florida, which requires
all students with reading skills below grade level to be retained in
the third grade, yet grants exemptions under special circumstances.
The authors
find that Florida's third-grade retention policy is in fact enforced
differentially depending on children's socioeconomic background,
especially maternal education. Holding exemption eligibility constant,
scoring right below the promotion cutoff results in an increase in the
probability of retention that is 14 percent greater for children whose
mothers have less than a high school degree compared with children
whose mothers have a bachelor's degree or more.
The authors
also find that the
discrepancies in retention rates are mainly driven by the fact that
students with well-educated mothers are more likely to be promoted
based on subjective exemptions, such as teacher portfolios.
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