Аннотация:Young students enter school with widely varying skills, and teachers often manage this heterogeneity by instructing students of similar skill levels together in small groups within classrooms. One problem with this practice is that low-socioeconomic status (SES) and non-Asian minority students are disproportionately placed into lower-ranked groups. However, the mechanisms through which this pattern comes about are not well understood. In this study, I view students' academic, social, and behavioral skills as cultural capital that is unevenly distributed across social categories of students and rewarded by teachers such that advantaged students receive higher group placements than their disadvantaged peers. Using data on first graders from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Kindergarten Cohort (ECLS-K), I find clear disparities in reading group placement by SES, race/ethnicity, gender, and family structure. Most of these inequalities result from the uneven distribution of academic, social, and behavioral skills that matter for teachers' grouping decisions. I conclude by relating these findings to broader institutional processes of concern to sociologists.