Staying on track - how ability grouping determines future earnings

When children start school, they are often divided into ability groups, and by high school this trend is formalized further, as students are directed onto different tracks. In theory, students are placed on tracks in order to maximize their achievement by grouping them based on ability or college orientation. Researchers have previously found that these tracks offer uneven opportunities for further achievement and success in college. Now, a study in Urban Education has shown how this effect persists into adulthood. The study examined the link between tracking in secondary school and salary income for young adults and whether these effects vary by the individual's gender and race. Using data from the National Education Longitudinal Study, the researchers found that educational tracking is associated with future income, independent of the quantity of education that individuals receive. The researchers suggest that it is important to inform educators, as well as parents and youth, on the long-term implications of track placement to ensure that they understand the ramifications of tracking decisions.

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Ability grouping reflects class and therefore this kind of research is ... at best ... solipsistic. Ability grouping on metrics other than test scores - on "soft skills" like collaboration, creativity, inquiry, etc. - should generate change, and it is CHANGE in achievement which is more important than class, for a school supported by public funds to improve access to the general diversity of the overall community.

Studies on how segregation achieves  ... segregated outcomes ought to have vanished around 1960 or so. Instead, naive and self-engaged educators waste time, money, and what little intelligence they want to invest in proving the obvious: tell 'em they're smart and they'll learn to be rich! Or the obverse, let 'em tell you they're rich and you'll credit them with being smart. For that matter, ask General Petraeus about the wisdom of rich women, or Romney about the financial insight of poor voters.

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