社会出身、学习领域和毕业生的职业发展:不同领域的社会不平等是否存在差异?1

Marita Jacob, M. Klein
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引用次数: 15

摘要

对分层和流动性的研究一致表明,在英国,社会出身对职业目的地的教育程度有直接影响,即使对学位持有者也是如此。然而,只有少数研究采用纵向和动态的视角来研究代际流动如何影响毕业生的职业生涯。利用多层次增长曲线模型和1970年英国队列研究(BCS70)的数据,我们通过观察自劳动力市场进入后的前十年社会不平等的出现,为这项研究做出了贡献。我们进一步区分了不同研究领域的毕业生,因为我们预计由于初始职业安置和向上流动过程的差异,社会差异会以不同的方式发展。我们发现,父母阶级对职业声望的影响不超过先前的成就。研究领域的独立分析表明,在STEM领域、艺术和人文领域,不同出身阶层的毕业生在职业声望和职业发展方面的最初差异并没有差异。只有在社会科学领域,工人阶级毕业生从较低的职业声望开始,但很快就赶上了来自较高阶层的同龄人。总的来说,我们的研究结果表明,一旦我们将关注点扩大到动态生命历程的角度,社会出身对学位持有者的职业成就没有直接影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social origin, field of study and graduates’ career progression: does social inequality vary across fields?1
Abstract Research on stratification and mobility has consistently shown that in the UK there is a direct impact of social origin on occupational destination net of educational attainment even for degree‐holders. However, only a few studies applied a longitudinal and dynamic perspective on how intergenerational mobility shapes graduates’ working careers. Using multilevel growth curve modelling and data from the 1970 British cohort study (BCS70), we contribute to this research by looking at the emergence of social inequalities during the first ten years since labour market entry. We further distinguish between graduates of different fields of study as we expect social disparities to develop differently due to differences in initial occupational placement and upward mobility processes. We find that parental class does not affect occupational prestige over and above prior achievement. Separate analyses by the field of study show that initial differences in occupational prestige and career progression do not differ between graduates from different classes of origin in STEM fields, and arts and humanities. It is only in the social sciences that working‐class graduates start with lower occupational prestige but soon catch up with their peers from higher classes. Overall, our results indicate no direct effect of social origin on occupational attainment for degree‐holders once we broaden our focus to a dynamic life course perspective.
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