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Yuchen Tian; Gorana T. González; Tara M. Mandalaywala – Developmental Science, 2024
Although actual experiences of upward social mobility are historically low, many adolescents and adults express a "belief" in social mobility (e.g., that social status can change). Although a belief in upward mobility (e.g., that status can improve) can be helpful for economically disadvantaged adolescents and adults, a belief in upward…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Beliefs, Social Mobility, Young Children
Figlio, David N.; Giuliano, Paola; Marchingiglio, Riccardo; Özek, Umut; Sapienza, Paola – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2021
We study the effect of exposure to immigrants on the educational outcomes of US-born students, using a unique dataset combining population-level birth and school records from Florida. This research question is complicated by substantial school selection of US-born students, especially among White and comparatively affluent students, in response to…
Descriptors: Student Diversity, Immigrants, Academic Achievement, White Students
Yulia Nesterova; Sarah K. Anderson – Prospects, 2024
In this article, we report on a study that explored how young people in Scotland understand and define peace. A total of 59 young people aged 12-18, from three schools (independent, state Roman Catholic, and state non-denominational) participated in this study. The young people were asked to participate in a peace data walk and, after that, to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Peace, Student Attitudes
Christopher Redding; Tiffany S. Tan; Seth B. Hunter – Educational Researcher, 2024
We present data from the Schools and Staffing Survey and the National Teacher and Principal Survey to document the prevalence of instructional coaching programs (ICPs) and consider how ICPs are distributed by school level, urbanicity, new teachers in a school, student enrollment, school poverty levels, student achievement levels, and state. We…
Descriptors: Coaching (Performance), Teacher Distribution, Elementary Schools, Municipalities
Yang, Xin; Dunham, Yarrow – Developmental Science, 2022
Past work suggests that children have an overly rosy view of rich people that stays consistent across childhood. However, adults do not show explicit pro-rich biases and even hold negative stereotypes against the rich (e.g., thinking that rich people are cold and greedy). When does this developmental shift occur, and when do children develop more…
Descriptors: Advantaged, Concept Formation, Stereotypes, Social Bias
Eric Dearing; Andres S. Bustamante; Henrik Daae Zachrisson; Deborah Lowe Vandell – Educational Researcher, 2024
Scholars theorize that "opportunity gaps" drive achievement disparities between children born into poverty versus affluence. In a 26-year longitudinal study (N = 814), we examine (a) economic disparity in children's accumulation of opportunities--from birth through high school--at home, childcare, school, afterschool, and in the…
Descriptors: Predictor Variables, Educational Attainment, Achievement Gap, Child Development
Xu, Ji; Yu, Dandan – Education Economics, 2022
This study estimates how students suffering from parental conflicts could affect their classmates in Chinese middle schools. We show that children with quarreling parents are more likely to misbehave. Negative spillovers from these potentially troubled peers concentrate on students from economically disadvantaged families. With greater exposure to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Middle School Students, Parents, Conflict
Rachel Louise Stenhouse; Nicola Ingram – British Journal of Sociology of Education, 2024
In this article we make an argument for the importance of embodied cultural capital in the generation of class advantage through private school students' access to Oxbridge. Private schools in England continue to reproduce advantage (Variyan 2019), however, establishing exactly how students are advantaged through private schooling is not…
Descriptors: Cultural Capital, Advantaged, Social Class, Private Schools
Summers, Kate – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2020
There is increasing emphasis on understanding economic advantage alongside disadvantage -- on studying both 'poverty' and 'riches'. This trend prompts and requires new ethical reflection. I argue that in qualitative interview research, a clearer distinction needs to be drawn between ethical commitments to individual research participants, and the…
Descriptors: Ethics, Economically Disadvantaged, Advantaged, Negative Attitudes
Atul Kumar; Vinaydeep Brar; Chetan Chaudhari; Shirish S. Raibagkar – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2025
The Indian government enacted the Right to Education Act (RTE) to provide free and compulsory elementary education to all economically underprivileged children between ages 6 and 14. All schools, including private schools, are required to reserve 25% of their enrollment slots for such students, with the government shouldering their fees. While…
Descriptors: Private Schools, Selective Admission, Access to Education, Educational Legislation
Netter, Julien – European Educational Research Journal, 2022
This paper reports the results of a study aimed at understanding the processes governing the construction of educational inequalities in French classrooms, the French school system being particularly unequal. Traditional explanations have focused on the factors governing the production of inequalities but have not always shown how these factors…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Teacher Expectations of Students, Hidden Curriculum
Gutiérrez, Gabriel; Carrasco, Alejandro – British Educational Research Journal, 2021
Socioeconomic segregation continues to be a central issue for education systems in which market-driven reforms have been implemented. This study analyses trends of socioeconomic segregation in Chile (1999-2018), considering a period with an absence of policies aimed at reducing segregation (1999-2007) and a later stage (2008-2015) when measures…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Socioeconomic Influences, Socioeconomic Status, Advantaged
Karbownik, Krzysztof; Özek, Umut – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2019
Using a regression discontinuity design generated by school-entry cutoffs and school records from an anonymous district in Florida, we identify externalities in human capital production function arising from sibling spillovers. We find positive spillover effects from an older to a younger child in less affluent families and negative spillover…
Descriptors: Siblings, Academic Achievement, Economically Disadvantaged, Advantaged
Danielle Sanderson Edwards; Kaitlin P. Anderson – National Center for Research on Education Access and Choice, 2025
Residential segregation accounts for most school segregation. School choice policies have the potential to decrease school segregation by allowing students to attend schools outside their neighborhoods. However, some research indicates that these policies can also contribute to increased segregation, likely due to differences in access to choice…
Descriptors: School Choice, School Segregation, Educational Policy, Race
Echelbarger, Margaret; Roberts, Steven O.; Gelman, Susan A. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2022
All societies have resource inequality, wherein some possess more resources than others. How should one respond to such inequality? We tested how children 4-13 years (N= 298) balance concerns about equity and ownership rights, when the two are at odds, in both individual (Study 1) and group (Study 2) contexts. Across these studies, children…
Descriptors: Ownership, Resources, Resource Allocation, Preschool Children