Glick Jennifer E, White Michael J
Department of Sociology, Arizona State University, PO Box 872101, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA.
Demography. 2003 Nov;40(4):759-83. doi: 10.1353/dem.2003.0034.
Two nationally representative cohorts--from the National Educational Longitudinal Study (NELS) and High School and Beyond (HSB)--were used to examine the effects of generation and duration of residence on students' performance on standardized tests over a two-year period. In multivariate models, generational status predicts variation in students' performance on baseline (sophomore) tests, with effects stronger for the later age cohort (NELS) than for the earlier age cohort (HSB). With regard to the trajectory of achievement, generational status has a greatly reduced role for both cohorts. The best predictors of the trajectory of achievement are not those that are based on nativity per se, but those that reflect the social environment experienced in the United States (i.e., ethnicity and family's socioeconomic status).
两项具有全国代表性的队列研究——来自全国教育纵向研究(NELS)和高中及以后(HSB)——被用于考察居住代际和居住时长对学生在两年期间标准化考试成绩的影响。在多变量模型中,代际身份能够预测学生在基线(高二)测试中的成绩差异,对较晚年龄队列(NELS)的影响强于较早年龄队列(HSB)。关于成绩轨迹,代际身份对两个队列的作用都大幅降低。成绩轨迹的最佳预测因素并非基于出生本身的因素,而是那些反映在美国所经历的社会环境的因素(即种族和家庭社会经济地位)。