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Socioeconomic origin, future expectations, and educational achievement: A longitudinal three-generation study of the persistence of family advantage

Burger, Kaspar; Mortimer, Jeylan T (2021). Socioeconomic origin, future expectations, and educational achievement: A longitudinal three-generation study of the persistence of family advantage. Developmental Psychology, 57(9):1540-1558.

Abstract

Expectations about the future direct effort in goal-oriented action and may influence a range of life course outcomes, including educational attainment. Here we investigate whether such expectations are implicated in the dynamics underlying the persistence of educational advantage across family generations, and whether such dynamics have changed in recent decades in view of historical change. Focusing on the role of domain-specific (educational) and general (optimism and control) expectations, we examine parallels across parent-child cohorts in (1) the relationships between parental socioeconomic status and children’s future expectations and (2) the associations between children’s future expectations and their academic achievement. We estimate structural equation models using data from the prospective multigenerational Youth Development Study (N= 422 three-generation triads [G1-G2-G3]; G1 mean age in 1988 = 41.0 years, G2 mean age in 1989= 14.7 years, G3 mean age in 2011= 15.8 years; G2 white in 1989 = 66.4%, G3 white in 2011 = 64.4%; G1 mean annual household income, converted to 2008 equivalents = $41,687, G2 mean annual household income in 2008 dollars = $42,962; G1 mode of educational attainment = high school, G2 mode of educational attainment = some college). We find intergenerational similarity in the relationships between parental educational attainment and children’s future expectations. Children’s educational expectations strongly predicted their academic achievement in the second generation, but not in the third generation. With educational expansion, the more recent cohort had higher educational expectations that were less strongly related to achievement. Overall, the findings reveal dynamics underlying the persistence of educational success across generations. The role of future expectations in this intergenerational process varies across historical time, confirming a central conclusion of life-span developmental psychology and life-course sociological research that individual functioning is influenced by sociocultural contexts.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Journal Article, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:06 Faculty of Arts > Institute of Sociology
06 Faculty of Arts > Jacobs Center for Productive Youth Development
Dewey Decimal Classification:370 Education
Uncontrolled Keywords:Life-span studies, Life-course Studies, Developmental and Educational Psychology, Demography, intergenerational transmission, human development in context, life course, prospective cohort study, optimism, academic achievement and attainment
Language:English
Date:1 September 2021
Deposited On:22 Nov 2021 09:22
Last Modified:26 Aug 2024 01:39
Publisher:American Psychological Association
ISSN:0012-1649
OA Status:Closed
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1037/dev0001238
PubMed ID:34929097
Project Information:
  • Funder: H2020
  • Grant ID: 791804
  • Project Title: DetEdIn - Micro-, Meso-, and Macro-Level Determinants of Educational Inequalities: An Interdisciplinary Approach
  • Funder: SNSF
  • Grant ID: PCEFP1_181098
  • Project Title: Understanding social gradients in education: A psycho-social-ecological framework

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