Gill Randip, Karim Mohammad Ehsanul, Puyat Joseph H, Petteni Monique Gagné, Guhn Martin, Janus Magdalena, Forer Barry, Gadermann Anne
Human Early Learning Partnership, University of British Columbia (UBC), 2206 East Mall, BC V6T 1Z3 Vancouver, Canada.
School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia (UBC), 2206 East Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z3 Canada.
Soc Psychol Educ. 2025;28(1):167. doi: 10.1007/s11218-025-10093-x. Epub 2025 Sep 5.
This study utilized a retrospective, population-based cohort of administrative records of 167,319 children who attended school in British Columbia, Canada. The outcomes of standardized English, math, and science exam scores, as well as high school graduation were examined. The associations between poverty and educational outcomes at high school were found to be complex. Children experiencing both household and neighbourhood poverty (i.e., "combined" poverty) at age 13 had significantly lower English, math, and science exam scores at grade 10, as well as having higher odds to not graduate before age 20. The effect of combined poverty was larger than household poverty only or neighbourhood poverty only for English exam scores and for graduating. However, the association between poverty with math or science outcome scores was mixed. Experiencing neighbourhood poverty only was generally associated with lower performance in educational outcomes across children of different immigrant generation status (non-immigrant, first-generation, second-generation), immigration admission category (economic, family, refugee), or region of origin (East Asia and Pacific, Europe and Central Asia, South Asia). However, children of specific immigration backgrounds who experienced household-only poverty appeared to score better on math exams in comparison to children who did not experience poverty from those same groups. Intervention and prevention efforts to reduce childhood poverty that also include immigrant-specific considerations could potentially improve children's educational outcomes.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11218-025-10093-x.
本研究利用了加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省167319名在校儿童的行政记录进行回顾性、基于人群的队列研究。研究考察了标准化英语、数学和科学考试成绩以及高中毕业情况等结果。发现贫困与高中教育结果之间的关联很复杂。13岁时经历家庭和邻里贫困(即“双重”贫困)的儿童在10年级时英语、数学和科学考试成绩显著较低,且在20岁前未毕业的几率更高。对于英语考试成绩和毕业情况,双重贫困的影响大于仅家庭贫困或仅邻里贫困的影响。然而,贫困与数学或科学成绩之间的关联则较为复杂。仅经历邻里贫困通常与不同移民代际身份(非移民、第一代、第二代)、移民入境类别(经济类、家庭类、难民类)或原籍地区(东亚和太平洋地区、欧洲和中亚地区、南亚地区)的儿童在教育结果方面表现较差有关。然而,与来自相同群体但未经历贫困的儿童相比,经历仅家庭贫困且具有特定移民背景的儿童在数学考试中似乎得分更高。旨在减少儿童贫困且纳入针对移民的特定考量因素的干预和预防措施可能会改善儿童的教育结果。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s11218-025-10093-x获取的补充材料。