TY - BOOK AU - Burroughs,Nathan A. AU - Gardner,Jacqueline A. AU - Zuschlag,Dirk F. AU - Van Vliet,Craig Joseph ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Socioeconomic Segregation and Educational Inequality: Evidence from International Assessments T2 - IEA Research for Education, A Series of In-depth Analyses Based on Data of the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA), SN - 9783031645945 AV - LC71-188 U1 - 379 23 PY - 2024/// CY - Cham PB - Springer Nature Switzerland, Imprint: Springer KW - Education and state KW - Mathematics KW - Study and teaching  KW - Education KW - Philosophy KW - Education Policy KW - Mathematics Education KW - Educational Philosophy N1 - 1: Why Should We Care About School Segregation?: Nathan Burroughs -- 2: Conceptualizing Socioeconomic Segregation: Nathan Burroughs -- 3: How Do IEA Studies Measure Socioeconomic Status? Evaluating the Consistency and Stability of Items: Dirk Zuschlag, Jacqueline Gardner, and Nathan Burroughs -- 4: Measuring Socioeconomic Segregation: Nathan Burroughs -- 5: The Relationship between SES Segregation and Student Outcomes: Nathan Burroughs and Craig Van Vliet -- 6: Taking Socioeconomic Segregation Seriously: Nathan Burroughs -- Appendix A -- Acknowledgments; Open Access N2 - This open access book uses multiple IEA Assessments to examine the relationship between socioeconomic segregation between classrooms and student outcomes. By examining Socioeconomic status (SES) segregation between classrooms as well as between schools, it produces a more accurate estimate of student sorting. Further, this study examines the differential impact of student sorting across subject areas and grades in order to explore whether school structure’s relationship to educational inequality exhibits content and longitudinal heterogeneity. This study employs time series, fixed-effect, random-effects, and synthetic-cohort methods to comprehensively investigate the robustness of the relationship between SES segregation and achievement inequalities. This project makes an important contribution to researchers’ understanding of student sorting’s impact using a comparative lens, while also providing important information to policymakers on the role of schools in mediating social inequalities UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-64594-5 ER -