The
federal government mandates that school personnel select race and
ethnicity identifiers for students who do not provide that information.
This process is called “observer identification,” and it poses a
potential threat to the validity of self-identified race/ethnicity data
because (a) evidence from other fields suggests that about 40% of the
time, observer identification does not match self-identification of some
of the fastest growing racial/ethnic groups in the K–12 population; (b)
state and local guidelines for observer identification vary greatly;
and (c) the Department of Education does not record how often observer
identification is used, but there is good reason to suspect that the
practice is widespread.
Article abstract
Article abstract
No comments:
Post a Comment