Educational Innovation in Multiracial Contexts: The Growth of Magnet Schools in American Education
(Report No. 1 of the Magnet Schools Study)

Analysis and Highlights

Study purpose

Magnet schools represent an effort to promote school desegregation and enhance educational quality. The federal government has provided substantial support for magnet schools through the Magnet Schools Assistance Program (MSAP), which has distributed over $739 million since 1985 to support the development and implementation of new magnet programs and the expansion of existing programs. The MSAP is scheduled for reauthorization in 1993 and the last major study of magnet schools is nearly a decade old, predating the MSAP.

This report addresses the following questions:

Subsequent reports will examine the impact of MSAP-funded and other magnet programs on desegregation and school quality.

Study design

Data were collected through telephone surveys of a random sample of 600 multischool districts, follow-up telephone interviews with a representative subset of 127 districts with magnet schools and 28 districts with mandatory desegregation plans but no magnet schools, and mail questionnaires distributed to approximately 2,000 magnet schools and programs.

Prevalence of magnet programs

The number of magnet school programs has increased dramatically over the past decade, with one in two large urban districts currently offering magnet school programs.

Magnet programs are attracting increasing numbers of students, and there is considerable unmet demand for magnet programs.

Magnet schools and school desegregation plans are primarily phenomena of large urban school systems with higher-than-average minority enrollments.

Characteristics of magnet programs

Magnet schools offer a wide range of distinctive programs, including programs emphasizing academic subjects such as math, science, aerospace technology, language immersion, or humanities (37%); instructional approaches such as basic skills, open classrooms, individualized instruction, Montessori, or enriched curricula (27%); career/vocational education (14%); gifted-talented programs (12%); and the arts (11%).

Most magnet school programs (58%) were whole school magnets, where all students in the school participate in the magnet program. Another 38% operated as program within school (PWS) magnets, where only a portion of the students in the school participated in the magnet program.

Magnet districts actively encourage and assist students to enroll in magnet schools, through outreach efforts to inform students about the programs and by providing transportation services to students.

Magnet schools are effective in attracting students from outside the immediate neighborhood, and they appear to be effective in attracting opposite race students to magnet schools. However, low-income students and students with special needs are somewhat underrepresented in magnet programs.

Impact of federal support for magnet programs

Federal support for magnet programs has increased dramatically over the past decade.

MSAP funding has been effective in encouraging and enabling districts to establish or expand magnet school programs.

Magnet schools in comparison with nonmagnet specialty schools and programs of choice

Taking both magnet and nonmagnet programs into account, 43% of the students in multischool public school systems are in districts with specialty schools or school choice programs.

Nonmagnet specialty programs typically provide fewer options for students than do magnet programs, tend to be concentrated at the secondary level, are more likely to offer gifted and talented or vocational curricula, and are much less likely to offer subject-matter oriented curricula.

Districts with choice programs expend less effort on disseminating information to promote these programs than do magnet districts, and they are less likely to provide transportation services to students who change schools under the choice program.

Copies of the report, Educational Innovation in Multiracial Contexts: The Growth of Magnet Schools in American Education, are available by writing the Planning and Evaluation Service, Office of the Under Secretary, U.S. Department of Education, 400 Maryland Avenue, S.W., Room 3127, Washington, DC 20202-8240.


 
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Last Modified: 03/09/2006