Crosnoe Robert, Muller Chandra
University of Texas at Austin.
Soc Probl. 2014 Nov;61(4):602-624. doi: 10.1525/sp.2014.12255.
Drawing on the primary/secondary effects perspective of educational inequality, this mixed methods study investigated connections between high school students' trajectories through college preparatory coursework and their relationships with parents and peers as a channel in the intergenerational transmission of socioeconomic inequality. Growth curve and multilevel analyses of national survey and transcript data revealed that having college-educated parents differentiated students' enrollment in advanced coursework at the start of high school and that this initial disparity was stably maintained over subsequent years. During this starting period of high school, exposure to school-based peer groups characterized by higher levels of parent education appeared to amplify these coursework disparities between students with and without college-educated parents. Ethnographic data from a single high school pointed to possible mechanisms for these patterns, including the tendency for students with college-educated parents to have more information about the relative weight of grades, core courses, and electives in college-going and for academically-relevant information from school peers with college-educated parents to matter most to students' coursework when it matched what was coming from their own parents.
基于教育不平等的主要/次要影响视角,这项混合方法研究调查了高中生在大学预科课程中的轨迹与其与父母及同伴的关系之间的联系,将其作为社会经济不平等代际传递的一个渠道。对全国调查和成绩单数据进行的增长曲线分析和多层次分析表明,父母受过大学教育使学生在高中开始时参与高级课程的情况有所不同,而且这种初始差距在随后几年中稳定保持。在高中这个起始阶段,接触以父母教育水平较高为特征的校内同伴群体似乎扩大了有和没有受过大学教育的父母的学生之间在课程学习上的差距。来自一所高中的人种志数据指出了这些模式的可能机制,包括父母受过大学教育的学生更有可能了解成绩、核心课程和选修课在大学入学中的相对权重,以及当来自父母受过大学教育的学校同伴提供的与学业相关的信息与自己父母提供的信息相匹配时,这些信息对学生的课程学习最为重要。