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March 4, 2025

Merging schools to reduce segregation: Two-school integration plan proposes grade-level campus consolidation

School mergers involve merging the attendance boundaries of adjacent schools and subsequently modifying the grades each serves to promote demographically-diverse classrooms. (a) Two adjacent K–5 schools within a district that happen to serve students who are demographically different from one another. (b) The schools can be merged so that one school serves only students in grades K–2 in the merged region, and the other serves only students in grades 3–5, thereby diversifying the student body of each school. Credit: Landry & Gillani
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School mergers involve merging the attendance boundaries of adjacent schools and subsequently modifying the grades each serves to promote demographically-diverse classrooms. (a) Two adjacent K–5 schools within a district that happen to serve students who are demographically different from one another. (b) The schools can be merged so that one school serves only students in grades K–2 in the merged region, and the other serves only students in grades 3–5, thereby diversifying the student body of each school. Credit: Landry & Gillani

Racial segregation remains common in US schools, 70 years after federal legislation formally outlawed segregation by race. But previous research has demonstrated that integration can benefit students of all races and ethnicities. Students at integrated schools learn how to make connections with children from different backgrounds, developing empathy and mutual respect.

Madison Landry and Nabeel Gillani explored whether merging schools could help integrate schools. One school could offer kindergarten through for the current catchment areas of two , while the remaining school could serve third through fifth graders for the same two catchment areas. This approach may be preferable to redistricting for some parents, because it does not break up groups of friends. Their findings are in PNAS Nexus.

The authors modeled the approach in elementary schools across 200 large serving over 4.5 million students, finding that combining two or three schools could reduce racial/ethnic segregation by a median of 20% and up to 60% in some school districts. Driving commutes to school would rise by just 3.7 minutes, on average. Mergers could, however, reduce walkability.

The utility of the approach depends on socio-geography. In Miami, where white students cluster by the water, there are few interfaces between racially dissimilar school catchment areas. However, in Plano, Texas, pairing 36 schools into 18 clusters and creating one triplet could halve the amount of racial/ethnic segregation districtwide. The authors share their results with the public at , where the expected outcomes of elementary school mergers can be explored at the district level.

More information: Madison Landry and Nabeel Gillani. Merging public elementary schools to reduce racial/ethnic segregation, PNAS Nexus (2025).

Journal information: PNAS Nexus

Provided by PNAS Nexus

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Merging schools by consolidating grade levels across two campuses can significantly reduce racial and ethnic segregation in elementary schools. This approach, modeled in 200 large school districts, could decrease segregation by a median of 20% and up to 60% in some areas, with minimal increases in commute times. The effectiveness varies by region, with notable success in areas like Plano, Texas, but challenges in places like Miami due to socio-geographic factors.

This summary was automatically generated using LLM.