John Jerrim , Institute of Education
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The socio-economic gradient in teenagers’ reading skills: how does England compare to other countries?
John Jerrim, Institute of Education
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Background• Social mobility has emerged as one of the key academic and
political topics in the UK over the past decade
• Economics: - intergenerational income mobility has decreased in the UK- Stronger association in the UK than elsewhere
• Some disagreement by Sociologists about the above (Goldthorpe, Saunders)
• Nevertheless, seems to be broad agreement that education is one of the key drivers of intergenerational persistence
• Hence intergenerational educational mobility (i.e. link between family background and children’s attainment) a key topic in its own right
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A model of intergenerational persistence
Family backgroundTime inputsGoods inputs
Heredity
University entry
Child’s teenage skills
STAGE 1 (Early investments)
University graduation
Labour market outcomes
STAGE 3 (Labour market entry)STAGE 2 (HE investment)
Three key stages: (1) Development of cognitive (and non-cognitive) skills(2) Investment in higher education(3) Labour market entry and outcomes
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Focus today……..
Family backgroundTime inputsGoods inputs
Heredity
University entry
Child’s teenage skills
STAGE 1 (Early investments)
University graduation
Labour market outcomes
STAGE 3 (Labour market entry)STAGE 2 (HE investment)
Three key stages: (1) Development of cognitive skills(2) Investment in higher education(3) Labour market entry and outcomes
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• Document the relationship between family background and teenagers’ reading skills
• How England currently compares to other countries on average
• Is the association between family background and low achievement greater in England than other developed nations……………. ………….or is it that low SES children struggle to obtain the highest level of skill?
• Is there evidence England has managed to weaken the association between family background and children’s outcomes over past decade?
Aims of this paper
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Benefits of international comparison
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Why compare educational mobility cross-nationally
• Some part of the association between parental abilities and children’s outcomes will be due to heredity.
• Hence difficult to know whether our estimates of this association are “big”
• Beller (2009) and Blanden (2009):- Cross-national studies provide a comparative context - Other countries act as a benchmark. Can assess whether the
association in England is particularly “weak” or “strong”
• Becoming increasingly attractive with the advent of major international studies of children’s ability (e.g. PISA) over past decade
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• Focus on comparison between England and the Anglophone countries (US, Canada, Australia) plus Germany and Finland
• Countries England often compared with – particular focus of policymakers
• Anglophone countries of particular interest given that they share a number of similar features (language, culture, historical ties, income inequality) but differ in terms of intergenerational mobility
• Recent Sutton Trust social mobility summit focusing on the Anglophone countries
• Also compare to wider selection of 22 OECD nations
Comparator nations
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DKNOFI
SE
JP
DE
CA
AUNZ
ESFR
PKCH
UKUS
SG
CN
AR
PE
CL
BR
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
Inco
me
elas
ticity
20.0 30.0 40.0 50.0 60.0Inequality (Gini)
Inequality versus intergenerational income mobility
Anglophone countries similar in terms of income inequality…..
….. but intergenerational income elasticity bigger in UK/ US than Australia or Canada
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Data
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Data – PISA 2009• Study of 15 year-olds’ skills in reading, maths and science held every
three years
• Average response rate of both schools and pupils high (≈ 90%)
• In 2009, reading was assigned the “major domain” (my focus)
• 40 test points ≈ 1 year of additional schooling
• Family background – quintiles of parental occupation based on ISEI index.
• Compare High SES (Top quintile) VS Low SES (Bottom quintile)
• E.g. Doctors/Lawyers VS Labourers/Roofers
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Methods
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Follow existing literature (Schuetz 2008, Woessman 2004) in estimating ‘capture all’ regressions with only basic controls (gender, immigrant status).
• Hence estimates will reflect all the channels by which family background influences children’s performance
• I focus on results for:- the most advantaged 20% in each country VS the least advantaged
20% (i.e. top versus bottom ISEI quintile)
- On average, and at each decile of the PISA reading test distribution
Model specification
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Methodology – OLS & Quantile regression
Low SES
High SES
M
M
OLS
Q Q
QREG
L
L
H
H
0.
1.
2.
3.
4
- 5 . 0 0 . 0 5 . 0 1 0 . 0
x
Low SES High SES
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ResultsRelationship between family background and test scores by ability:
2009
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Results – Difference in average test scores
ISFI
CANODKCHIE
ESNLIT
DEPLSE
AU GB(E)
ATPT
GB(S)CZFRUSBENZ
40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 140
Test point difference between advantaged and disadvantaged groups
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BUT the relationship between SES and high achievement in England seems particularly strong
Q10 Q20 Q30 Q40 Q50 OLS Q60 Q70 Q80 Q90IS* IS* IS* IS* IS* IS* FI* FI* FI* FI*FI* FI* FI* FI* FI* FI* IS* IS* IS* IS*NL NO* CA* CA* NO* CA* CA* CA* CA* DE*NO CA* NO* NO* CA* NO* NO* DK* ES* CA*CA DK DK ES ES* DK* ES* NO* DK* DK*CH NL CH DK DK* CH IE* ES* DE* ES*DK CH PL CH IE* IE DK* IE* NO* IE*GB(E) IE NL IE CH ES CH** DE* NL* AT*IT PL IE PL SE NL IT CH* IE* CH*IE GB(E) GB(E) IT IT IT PL NL CH* NL*SE IT ES SE AU DE AU IT IT** IT*PL GB(S) IT AU NL PL NL PL FR NO*GB(S) ES GB(S) NL PL SE SE FR PL SE**AU SE SE GB(E) GB(E) AU DE AU BE PT**ES AU AU GB(S) DE GB(E) PT BE AT PL**AT CZ CZ FR GB(S) AT FR PT AU BECZ PT DE CZ PT PT GB(E) SE PT AUUS AT PT DE FR GB(S) GB(S) AT SE FRDE** US FR PT CZ CZ CZ GB(E) GB(E) CZPT* DE** US US AT FR AT CZ CZ GB(E)FR* FR* AT** AT** US US BE GB(S) GB(S) USNZ* BE* BE* BE* BE* BE* US NZ NZ NZBE* NZ* NZ* NZ* NZ* NZ* NZ** US US GB(S)
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Quantile regression results
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 10040
50
60
70
80
90
100
110
120
England Germany USCanada Finland
Percentile
diff
eren
ce b
etw
een
adva
ntag
ed a
nd d
isad
vant
aged
gr
oups
Comparatively Strong association between SES and high achievement
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Results – Change over timeEvidence of change in family background effect: 2000-2009
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Results – Change over time
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 10085
90
95
100
105
110
115
1202000200320062009
Percentile
Tes
t poi
nt d
iffer
ence
bet
wee
n ad
vant
aged
an
d di
sadv
anta
ged
grou
ps
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……But caution is required• How comparable is PISA data over time for England?• I discuss this issue in another paper:
“England's "plummeting" PISA test scores between 2000 and 2009: Is the performance of our secondary school pupils really in relative decline?”
• Some major changes to how survey is conducted……- Test month- Survey population- Response rates
• But evidence of weakening relationship between SES and educational attainment consistent with other papers (Gregg and Macmillan 2010; Sullivan et al, 2011)
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Implications for policy
• Access to “elite” universities and top professions require candidates to have high level skills…….
• ……but very strong association in England between SES and high achievement (SES gap > 2 years of schooling)
• Such pathways are hence currently not viable options for most disadvantaged teenagers
• Key to widening university access, entry to top professions and top end social mobility is to reduce the link between family background and high achievement
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Possible policy options…..• Raising aspirations of disadvantaged young people (to
boost attainment)?
• Change incentives of schools / pupils away from “floor targets”?
• Targeted gifted and talented schemes?
• A return to CSE / O-Levels !!?
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Conclusions
• The difference between advantaged and disadvantaged children’s PISA 2009 reading test scores in England is similar (on average) to that in most other developed countries
•Yet the association between family background and high achievement seems to be stronger in England than elsewhere
•Some evidence of a reduction in the association between family background and average test scores since 2000
• Any reduction that has happened since 2000 seems to have occurred due to a narrowing of SES differences at the bottom of the test distribution