Grandparents’ educational attainment and grandchildren’s cognitive skills
an article by Jason L Ferguson (University of California, Berkeley, USA) and Douglas D Ready (Teachers College, Columbia University, New York) published in Early Childhood Research Quarterly Volume 26 Issue 2 (2nd Quarter 2011)
Abstract
Inherited privilege and status remain powerful factors in the distribution of opportunity in American life. These transfers of socioeconomic resources across generations are facilitated by the links between adult educational attainment and children’s cognitive skills. Our current study expands the notion of social reproduction beyond this narrow two-generation approach to investigate the links between grandparents’ educational attainment and their grandchildren’s academic abilities. Using a nationally representative sample of over 13,000 children who participated in the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort (ECLS-K), we find that familial advantages in human capital persist over time and that these advantages are associated with improved cognitive outcomes among later generations. Even after controlling for a wide array of socio-economic and demographic characteristics, young children with college-educated grandparents possess stronger literacy and mathematics skills at the start of formal schooling. Propensity score approaches, which address concerns regarding the endogeneity inherent in the topic, yield similar results, suggesting the robustness of our findings.
Research highlights
Young children with college-educated grandparents have stronger literacy and math skills at the start of school than children with grandparents with less education, even after controlling for parent education and other demographic factors.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment