Gentrification and Academic Achievement: A Review of Recent Research

Author/s: 

Francis A. Pearman

Year of Publication: 
2019
Publication: 
Review of Educational Research
Volume/Issue: 
89(1)
Pages: 
125-165

Research in the neighborhood effects tradition has primarily concerned itself with understanding the consequences of growing up in high-poverty neighborhoods. In recent years, however, the in-migration of relatively affluent households into disinvested central city neighborhoods—commonly referred to as gentrification—has markedly risen, transforming the racial, socioeconomic, and institutional composition of many urban neighborhoods. This article examines what existing literature reveals about what these changes mean for children’s academic achievement, with particular attention paid to the impacts of gentrification-induced changes to the social ecology, institutional composition, residential stability, and environmental conditions of urban neighborhoods. The final section proposes a rigorous interdisciplinary research agenda for advancing this budding field of education research.

Primary Research Area:

APA Citation

Pearman, F.A. (2019). Gentrification and Academic Achievement: A Review of Recent Research. Review of Educational Research, 89(1), 125-165.

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