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Journal ArticleDOI

Socioeconomic Status and Academic Outcomes in Developing Countries: A Meta-Analysis:

25 Sep 2019-Review of Educational Research (SAGE PublicationsSage CA: Los Angeles, CA)-Vol. 89, Iss: 6, pp 875-916

TL;DR: Despite the multiple meta-analyses documenting the association between socioeconomic status (SES) and achievement, none have examined this question outside of English-speaking industrialized countr....

AbstractDespite the multiple meta-analyses documenting the association between socioeconomic status (SES) and achievement, none have examined this question outside of English-speaking industrialized countr...

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Citations
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DOI
01 Dec 2011

1,193 citations

01 Oct 2010
TL;DR: MacLeod, Jay as mentioned in this paper conducted participant observation of two groups of male youth, the Hallway Hangers and the Brothers, living in a housing project called Clarendon Heights, but the two groups differed in important respects: the Hallways Hangers are predominantly white youth who, at that point in their young lives, openly resisted the American achievement ideology advanced by schools.
Abstract: MacLeod, Jay. 2009 (3rd ed). Ain't No Makin' It: Aspirations and Attainment in a Low-Income Neighborhood. Boulder. CO: Westview Press In Ain't No Making' It: Aspirations and Attainment in a Low-Income Neighborhood (1987) Jay MacLeod expertly shows education's role in the process of social reproduction, or how class inequality passes from one generation to the next. On the jacket cover of the third edition, preeminent sociologists-like William J. Wilson-comment enthusiastically about the updates on subjects' socio-economic status 20+ years after the initial study. They underscore the "classic" status of ANMI in scholarship on structural inequality and social reproduction. For readers unfamiliar with the book, I briefly describe the author's initial study and the contributions from data collected for the second edition. Following this, I discuss the added longitudinal data obtained for the third edition, its important new insights, and the usefulness of this book for courses in several core areas of sociology. In 1982 Jay MacLeod conducted participant observation of two groups of male youth, the Hallway Hangers and the Brothers. Both lived in a housing project called Clarendon Heights, but the two groups differed in important respects. The Hallways Hangers are predominantly white youth who, at that point in their young lives, openly resisted the American achievement ideology advanced by schools. They were dropouts and underachievers, saw few opportunities for themselves in the economy and other structures of society, and subsequently had no aspirations for a better life. In contrast the Brothers, predominantly black youth, demonstrated their belief in America as a land of opportunity by adopting its cultural norms, institutional rules, and by applying themselves in school (albeit with mixed results). They had strong faith that education would give them the needed human capital to succeed in middle-class jobs. When asked about racism, most believed that collective discrimination was a thing of the past. Any future challenges they faced from prejudicial people could be overcome with focus, hard work, and commitment. By dismissing racism and classism, both groups failed to recognize any structural basis for inequality. MacLeod also shows how the process of social reproduction works in practice. Social structure, he explains, becomes embedded in the "habitus" (Bourdieu) of the lower classes and shapes the aspirations of the Hallway Hangers and Brothers. Habitus refers to "subjects' dispositions, which reflect a class-based experience and a corresponding social grammar of taste, knowledge, and behavior." Using habitus as a theoretical framework, MacLeod stresses, helps to transcend the dualism that characterizes scholarship on social reproduction. It is not solely one-structure-or the other-agency. Both are responsible for class inequality and its reproduction. (Although MacLeod does concede that structure is primary.) The second edition is based on data collected on the men's lives nine years later, and the comparative racial dimension of this study yields another important insight into the process of social reproduction. The majority of Hallway Hangers and Brothers have jobs in the secondary labor market, with low wages, skill requirements, and irregular work. …

422 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Cooper's revised and expanded fourth edition of Research Synthesis and MetaAnalysis: A Step-by-Step Approach (2010) provides these needed guidelines with special attention given to the threats to validity at all steps of the research synthesis process.
Abstract: The need for research synthesis grows along with the volume of contemporary published scholarship. Reporting such synthesis warrants rigorous guidelines for preparing these important, information-rich documents that make statements concerning the state of knowledge about a topic, gaps in knowledge, or the aggregation or integration of primary research. Cooper’s revised and expanded fourth edition of Research Synthesis and MetaAnalysis: A Step-by-Step Approach (2010) provides these needed guidelines with special attention given to the threats to validity at all steps of the research synthesis process.

109 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Long Shadow: Family Background, Disadvantaged Urban Youth, and the Transition to Adulthood as mentioned in this paper examines the long-term outcomes of the Beginning School Study Youth Panel (BSSYP), a representative sample of Baltimore public school first-graders selected in the fall of 1982 and followed through 2006.
Abstract: Baltimore entered the national spotlight in April 2015 with the death of Freddie Gray and the ensuing citywide protests. While The Long Shadow: Family Background, Disadvantaged Urban Youth, and the Transition to Adulthood does not deal specifically with issues of police brutality, its focus on the urban disadvantaged in Baltimore feels particularly important given these recent events. This book is the culmination of over two decades of research by some of sociology’s most respected scholars. Utilizing a life course developmental perspective, the authors examine the long-term outcomes of the Beginning School Study Youth Panel (BSSYP), a representative sample of Baltimore public school first-graders selected in the fall of 1982 and followed through 2006. A particular strength of the sample is the oversampling of poor whites. The existence and inclusion of poor and lower SES whites allows the researchers to examine racial differences within, and not simply across, socioeconomicstrata,a strategy that is often missing from studies of urban poverty. While the BSSYP study followed the children through high school, the authors fielded additional surveys after high school when the sample averaged age 22 (the Young Adult Survey, YAS) and 28 (the Mature Adult Survey, MAS). Sprinkled throughout the text are also short qualitative quotes used to illustrate some statistical points. The first chapter of the book introduces the reader to Baltimore, discusses the challenges facing the urban poor, and describes the study’s sampling and methods. The second chapter provides a relatively brief synopsis of Baltimore’s movement from ‘‘industrial boom’’ to ‘‘industrial bust.’’ While this narrative will be familiar to those with knowledge of the deindustrialization of Northeastern and Midwestern cities through the twentieth century, the authors do a particularly nice job of reminding readers that while these events might now seem to be in the distant past, they were crucial events in the life course of their sample’s parents. Chapters Three and Four focus on the early life of the BSSYP, paying specific attention to how family (Chapter 3) and neighborhood and school (Chapter 4) influence young people. Given that the research looks at these young people and their families in the early 1980s, much of what is discussed in these chapters should be familiar to readers. In Chapter Five, the authors move beyond the BSSYP and examine their sample’s transition into adulthood. The authors analyze four demographic markers: gaining employment, marrying (or partnering), moving out of the parental home, and becoming parents. They then identify the most common patterns of completion (or lack thereof) of these markers and the family background most often attached to these patterns. Those still reading this review carefully will notice educational completion is not included in the patterns discussed above. This is unique, as education has generally been treated as one of the ‘‘traditional’’ markers of the transition to adulthood by scholars. The authors argue that while the other transitions are clear-cut (that is, one clearly becomes a parent or does not), education does not have as finite an end and therefore is not included in these analyses. Instead, levels of education and employment (occupational status and earnings) are the socioeconomic destinations of the sample the authors focus on in Chapters Six through Eight. The authors find that baccalaureate completion by age 28 is particularly difficult for those from the lowest socioeconomic strata in the sample. There are also differences in employment by race and gender, a topic examined

44 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Feng Zhang1, Ying Jiang1, Hua Ming1, Yi Ren1, Lei Wang1, Silin Huang1 
TL;DR: The findings suggest that there is a pathway from family SES to children's academic achievement through parental academic involvement and that this pathway is dependent on the level of parental subjective social mobility.
Abstract: Background Low family socio-economic status (SES) is usually associated with children's poor academic achievement, but the mechanisms underlying this relationship are less understood. Aims The present study examined the mediating role of parental academic involvement and the moderating role of parental subjective social mobility in this relationship with cross-sectional data. Sample and methods A total of 815 fourth- to sixth-grade children were recruited from five elementary schools in China. Family SES (measured by parents' education, parents' occupation and family income) and parental subjective social mobility were obtained directly from parents, parental academic involvement was reported by children, and information on children's academic achievement was collected from their teachers. Results The results showed that (1) both family SES and parental academic involvement were positively correlated with children's Chinese and math achievement, (2) parental academic involvement mediated the relationships between family SES and children's Chinese and math achievement, and (3) parental subjective social mobility moderated the path from family SES to parental academic involvement. The models of children's Chinese and math achievement showed that the association between family SES and parental academic involvement was weak among children's parents who reported high levels of subjective social mobility. Conclusions These findings suggest that there is a pathway from family SES to children's academic achievement through parental academic involvement and that this pathway is dependent on the level of parental subjective social mobility.

13 citations


References
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Journal ArticleDOI

45,865 citations


"Socioeconomic Status and Academic O..." refers background or methods or result in this paper

  • ...Initial agreement levels were 100% for grade level, number of SES components included in study, and achievement measures (Cohen’s kappa = 1.0). Cohen’s kappa for type of attainment measure, SES type, and source of report were .90, .92, and .96 respectively. Weekly meetings were held to resolve coding discrepancies, and discussions were held to reach a 100% agreement between both codes. The first author reviewed all codes for accuracy and resolved disagreements when a consensus could not be reached. The coding scheme was refined to adjust for coding errors arising from ambiguity. Rosenthal (1991) and Cooper (2010) strongly recommend this method of independent double-coding by different coders and resolving discrepancies involving a third coder to ensure high reliability....

    [...]

  • ..., 2017) suggest that although the ESs are weaker than that suggested by the initial Coleman report, the relation between SES and achievement can still be qualified as moderate to strong. These meta-analyses have contributed to our understanding of the SES-achievement relation as shown by the large impact they have made in the scholarship. However, these studies exclusively focus on U.S. samples, and none of them include developing countries in their sample. The first meta-analysis by White (1982) did not limit the geographic scope but reported that almost all studies were done in the United States, with a few conducted in Canada and England. Sirin’s (2005) follow-up study explicitly set sample students in the United States as a criterion of inclusion, excluding all other non-U....

    [...]

  • ...These can be qualified as “small” according to Cohen’s (1988) guideline but need to be compared to other findings in this particular area to be interpreted meaningfully. We focused on the results of the achievement outcome as we did not find any studies reporting the SES-attainment relation in prior research against which to compare our results. The ES we found of .12 for SES and achievement is lower compared with .27 found by Sirin (2005) in U....

    [...]

  • ..., 2017) suggest that although the ESs are weaker than that suggested by the initial Coleman report, the relation between SES and achievement can still be qualified as moderate to strong. These meta-analyses have contributed to our understanding of the SES-achievement relation as shown by the large impact they have made in the scholarship. However, these studies exclusively focus on U.S. samples, and none of them include developing countries in their sample. The first meta-analysis by White (1982) did not limit the geographic scope but reported that almost all studies were done in the United States, with a few conducted in Canada and England. Sirin’s (2005) follow-up study explicitly set sample students in the United States as a criterion of inclusion, excluding all other non-U.S. samples. Harwell et al. (2017) did not explicitly discuss geographical location but included mostly U....

    [...]

  • ...These can be qualified as “small” according to Cohen’s (1988) guideline but need to be compared to other findings in this particular area to be interpreted meaningfully. We focused on the results of the achievement outcome as we did not find any studies reporting the SES-attainment relation in prior research against which to compare our results. The ES we found of .12 for SES and achievement is lower compared with .27 found by Sirin (2005) in U.S. studies published between 1990 and 2000, and also compared to .29 and .25 found for U.S. studies published between 1990 and 1999 and between 2000 and 2011, respectively, in Harwell et al. (2017). We note that our study additionally covers the most recent decade...

    [...]

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the concept of social capital is introduced and illustrated, its forms are described, the social structural conditions under which it arises are examined, and it is used in an analys...
Abstract: In this paper, the concept of social capital is introduced and illustrated, its forms are described, the social structural conditions under which it arises are examined, and it is used in an analys...

30,215 citations


"Socioeconomic Status and Academic O..." refers background in this paper

  • ...Up to date, the majority of meta-analyses in education including developing countries have been focused on program effectiveness and examined attainment outcomes (Conn, 2017; García & Saavedra, 2017; Krishnaratne, White, & Carpenter, 2013; McEwan, 2015; Petrosino, Morgan, Fronius, Tanner-Smith, & Boruch, 2015). The only two meta-analyses that examined achievement outcomes in program effectiveness studies are McEwan (2015) and Petrosino et al....

    [...]

  • ...…to their children through education in the United States and the United Kingdom (Bradley & Corwyn, 2002; BrooksGunn, Duncan, & Aber, 1997; Coleman, 1988; Harwell, Maeda, Bishop, & Xie, 2017; Letourneau, Duffett-Leger, Levac, Watson, & Young-Morris, 2013; MacLeod, 1995; Marks, Cresswell,…...

    [...]

  • ...Up to date, the majority of meta-analyses in education including developing countries have been focused on program effectiveness and examined attainment outcomes (Conn, 2017; García & Saavedra, 2017; Krishnaratne, White, & Carpenter, 2013; McEwan, 2015; Petrosino, Morgan, Fronius, Tanner-Smith, & Boruch, 2015). The only two meta-analyses that examined achievement outcomes in program effectiveness studies are McEwan (2015) and Petrosino et al. (2015), who explored test scores, grades, and achievement measures as “ancillary effects” beyond the main effects of educational attainment....

    [...]

  • ...The importance of family SES for academic outcomes has been emphasized since the monumental Coleman report (Coleman et al., 1966) in the United States and the Plowden report (Peaker, 1971) in the United Kingdom. Coleman et al. (1966) found that school SES trumped familial influences in predicting students’ outcomes, and school SES—a proxy for many school processes (e.g., teacher quality, school resources, classroom climate)—was more predictive of student achievement than family SES. In particular, minority students’ achievement depended more on the schools they attended compared to the achievement of majority students, but schools had little impact on students’ achievement independent of their family background. However, in this study and other subsequent studies, academic outcome has often been limited to achievement. Achievement typically include standardized tests, teacher rating scales, class grades, GPA, and self-rated academic performance or competence. Achievement is distinct from attainment type outcomes, which is traditionally measured by the years of education completed by students or the highest degree attained by students. Low educational attainment is due to children who do not enroll (i.e., enroll at all or enroll at the correct age level), attend school, or progress to the next grade or who drop out altogether (World Bank, 2004). Thus, attainment outcomes broadly encompass indicators defining the milestones necessary for students’ quality learning in school, and can include measures such as enrollment rates, attendance, absence, and dropout. Most studies published after the Coleman et al. report (1966) used only achievement outcomes and focused on Western industrialized countries....

    [...]

  • ...The importance of family SES for academic outcomes has been emphasized since the monumental Coleman report (Coleman et al., 1966) in the United States and the Plowden report (Peaker, 1971) in the United Kingdom. Coleman et al. (1966) found that school SES trumped familial influences in predicting students’ outcomes, and school SES—a proxy for many school processes (e....

    [...]

Book
21 Feb 1986
TL;DR: The first handbook on the sociology of education as discussed by the authors synthesizes major advances in education over the past several decades, incorporating both a systematic review of significant theoretical and empirical work and challenging original contributions by distinguished American, English, and French sociologists.
Abstract: The first of its kind, this handbook synthesizes major advances in the sociology of education over the past several decades. It incorporates both a systematic review of significant theoretical and empirical work and challenging original contributions by distinguished American, English, and French sociologists. In his introduction, John G. Richardson traces the development of the sociology of education and reviews the important classical European works in which this discipline is grounded. Each chapter, devoted to a major topic in the field, provides both a review of the literature and an exposition of an original thesis. The inclusion of subjects outside traditional sociological concern--such as the historical foundations of education and the sociology of special education--gives an interdisciplinary scope that enhances the volume's usefulness.

7,067 citations

Book
18 Aug 2000
TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analysis procedure called “Meta-Analysis Interpretation for Meta-Analysis Selecting, Computing and Coding the Effect Size Statistic and its applications to Data Management Analysis Issues and Strategies.
Abstract: Introduction Problem Specification and Study Retrieval Selecting, Computing and Coding the Effect Size Statistic Developing a Coding Scheme and Coding Study Reports Data Management Analysis Issues and Strategies Computational Techniques for Meta-Analysis Data Interpreting and Using Meta-Analysis Results

6,641 citations


"Socioeconomic Status and Academic O..." refers methods or result in this paper

  • ...In our sample, 19 studies reported the raw correlation and sample size while 30 did not report a correlation directly but provided enough information to calculate an ES using the formula provided by Lipsey and Wilson (2001)....

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  • ...Publication bias has been identified as a threat in other studies as journals tend to favor significant findings (Borenstein et al., 2009; Lipsey & Wilson, 2001)....

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Book
01 Jan 1984
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors define research results, retrieve and assess research results and compare and combine research results to combine probabilities, and evaluate meta-analytic procedures and meta-Analytic results.
Abstract: Introduction Defining Research Results Retrieving and Assessing Research Results Comparing and Combining Research Results Combining Probabilities Illustrations of Meta-Analytic Procedures The Evaluation of Meta-Analytic Procedures and Meta-Analytic Results

5,177 citations


"Socioeconomic Status and Academic O..." refers methods in this paper

  • ...Rosenthal (1991) and Cooper (2010) strongly recommend this method of independent double-coding by different coders and resolving discrepancies involving a third coder to ensure high reliability....

    [...]