论文标题
更少,更好的途径?中国少数民族地区农村学校合并的交叉影响
Fewer, better pathways for all? Intersectional impacts of rural school consolidation in China's minority regions
论文作者
论文摘要
小学合并 - 将小型社区学校或其合并关闭到更大,改善的学校中 - 已成为对中等收入国家不断变化的农村人口众多人口统计的重大政策回应。在中国,大规模合并发生在21世纪初期。由于官方认可的少数族裔人口不成比例地居住在农村和偏远地区,因此少数民族学生处于经历学校合并风险的较高风险中。我们通过利用在2011年对具有少数少数人群的省份和自治地区的调查中捕获的封闭时间和同伙来分析合并对教育程度的异构影响,并报告中国的民族语言能力。我们考虑在少数群体地位,性别和社区种族组成和社会经济地位的交叉点上定义的群体之间的异质治疗效果。与有学校的村庄相比,学校关闭的村庄报告说,现在参加的学校的学生资源更高,不太可能提供少数教学语言,更有可能让汉教师,更远的地方,并且更有可能需要登机。与汉青年人相比,少数族裔青年对封闭的影响对教育程度和书面普通话设施的影响都受到了负面影响。但是,仅在最贫穷的村庄中,对少数族裔青年造成的重大处罚。对于女孩来说,处罚通常更重,但是在最偏种的少数民族村庄中,来自少数民族家庭的男孩非常容易受到对成就和书面普通话设施的关闭影响。结果表明,少数群体地位,性别和社区特征的交叉点可以描述政策影响的重大异质性。
Primary school consolidation--the closure of small community schools or their mergers into larger, better-resourced schools--is emerging as a significant policy response to changing demographics in middle income countries with large rural populations. In China, large-scale consolidation took place in the early 21st century. Because officially-recognized minority populations disproportionately reside in rural and remote areas, minority students were among those at elevated risk of experiencing school consolidation. We analyze heterogeneous effects of consolidation on educational attainment and reported national language ability in China by exploiting variations in closure timing across villages and cohorts captured in a 2011 survey of provinces and autonomous regions with substantial minority populations. We consider heterogeneous treatment effects across groups defined at the intersections of minority status, gender, and community ethnic composition and socioeconomic status. Compared to villages with schools, villages whose schools had closed reported that the schools students now attended were better resourced, less likely to offer minority language of instruction, more likely to have Han teachers, farther away, and more likely to require boarding. Much more than Han youth, ethnic minority youth were negatively affected by closure, in terms of its impact on both educational attainment and written Mandarin facility. However, significant penalties accruing to minority youth occurred only in the poorest villages. Penalties were generally heavier for girls, but in the most ethnically segregated minority villages, boys from minority families were highly vulnerable to closure effects on attainment and written Mandarin facility. Results show that intersections of minority status, gender, and community characteristics can delineate significant heterogeneities in policy impacts.