School choice may allow schools to “cream skim” students perceived as
easier to educate. To test this, researchers sent emails from fictitious parents
to 6,452 schools in 29 states and Washington, D.C. The fictitious parent
asked whether any student is eligible to apply to the school and how to
apply. Each email signaled a randomly assigned attribute of the child.
This report finds that schools are less likely to respond to inquiries from
students with poor behavior, low achievement, or a special need. Lower
response rates to students with a potentially significant special need
are driven by charter schools. Otherwise, these results hold for
traditional public schools in areas of school choice and high-value
added schools.
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