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引用次数: 0
摘要
以往的研究表明,社会经济地位高(SES)的人的教育期望相对不受低学业成绩的影响,这种现象被称为 "粘性期望"。然而,这一结果可能因内生性和学业成绩与教育期望之间的反向因果关系而产生偏差。利用来自 11 个有严格入学规定的国家的《国际数学与科学趋势研究》数据,并基于入学截止日期前几个月出生的儿童在校表现不佳这一既定结论,我们使用出生月份作为工具,通过父母的教育程度来识别早期学业成绩对父母完成大学学业预期的因果效应。基于工具变量(IV)回归的研究结果表明,在横截面数据中,社会出身对子女成绩与父母期望之间关系的调节作用被适度高估。尽管如此,高社会经济地位父母期望的粘性在 IV 模型中得到了证实,证明当父母受过高等教育时,父母期望受子女早期成就的影响较小。
Month of Birth, Early Academic Achievement, and Parental Expectations of University Completion: A New Test on Sticky Expectations
Previous studies have shown that educational expectations of individuals with high socioeconomic status (SES) are relatively unaffected by low academic performance, a phenomenon called “sticky expectations.” However, this result might be biased by endogeneity and reverse causality between academic achievement and educational expectations. Using data from the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study from 11 countries with a strict school-entry rule and building on the well-established finding that children born in the months before the school-entry cutoff underperform at school, we use birth month as an instrument to identify the causal effect of early academic achievement on parents’ expectations of university completion by parental education. Our findings based on the instrumental variable (IV) regression show that the moderation of social origin in the relationship between children’s performance and parental expectations is moderately overestimated in cross-sectional data. Nonetheless, the stickiness of high-SES parental expectations is confirmed in the IV model, proving that parental expectations are less affected by children’s early achievement when the parents are highly educated.
期刊介绍:
Sociology of Education (SOE) provides a forum for studies in the sociology of education and human social development. SOE publishes research that examines how social institutions and individuals’ experiences within these institutions affect educational processes and social development. Such research may span various levels of analysis, ranging from the individual to the structure of relations among social and educational institutions. In an increasingly complex society, important educational issues arise throughout the life cycle.