Housing, Neighborhoods, and Education Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Childrens educational outcomes are determined not only by school inputs, such as teachers, curriculum, or classroom peers, but also by a broad range of resources and experiences outside the classroom. Housing and neighborhoodswhere children liveare likely where students spend most of their time when not in school and can play a crucial role in childrens development. Housing may influence childrens K12 educational outcomes through three key channels. First, unit quality (i.e., size, ventilation, etc.) may affect student performance through sleep, ability to concentrate, or health. Second, affordability and tenure may shape student outcomes by affecting disposable income or wealth accumulation, which could be used for complementary educational inputs or could influence outcomes by affecting parental stress and housing stability. Third, housing stability/mobility may itself result in better or worse academic outcomes depending on whether moves are made to access better opportunities or are disruptive. Neighborhoods may also play an important role in education by shaping the peers and adult role models to whom children are exposed, through levels of exposure to crime and violence, and access to opportunities, such as the quality of local schools. A growing body of research points to the importance of both housing and neighborhoods in shaping educational outcomes, suggesting investments in housing or neighborhoods may pay an educational dividend and such investments may be leveraged to improve childrens educational outcomes. Yet there is still work to be done to better understand the roles that housing and neighborhoods play in shaping educational outcomes. In particular, future research should focus on examining how the physical aspects of housing may shape childrens outcomes, disentangling the effects of residential mobility under different circumstances (i.e., forced moves due to job losses versus voluntary moves), and estimating the effects of specific neighborhood changes or improvements -- on academic outcomes.

published proceedings

  • Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Economics and Finance

author list (cited authors)

  • Cordes, S. A., Han, J., & Schwartz, A.

citation count

  • 0

complete list of authors

  • Cordes, Sarah A||Han, Jeehee||Schwartz, Amy

publication date

  • December 2022