Are classrooms equalizers or amplifiers of inequality? A genetically informative investigation of educational performance

Kim Stienstra*, Antonie Knigge, Ineke Maas, Eveline L. De Zeeuw, Dorret I. Boomsma

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

We investigate the influence of the classroom environment on educational performance and its dependency on parental socio-economic status (SES). The classroom environment can have a compensatory effect and decrease educational inequality, in which case the classroom context is more important for children originating from lower SES families. Alternatively, there can be an amplifying effect, in which case the classroom environment is more important for high-SES children. This would increase educational inequality. We investigate the two alternatives by applying a twin design to data from 4,216 twin pairs from the Netherlands Twin Register (birth cohorts 1991-2002). Some twin pairs share a classroom and other twins from the same pair are in different classrooms. We use this fact to decompose the variance in educational performance at the end of primary school into four components: genetic variance, classroom variance, shared environmental variance, and non-shared environmental variance. We find that of the total variance in educational performance, only a small part (2 per cent) can be attributed to differences between classrooms within schools. The influence of the classroom was larger when the level of parental SES was lower (up to 7.7 per cent) indicating a compensatory effect.

Original languageEnglish
Article numberjcac054
Pages (from-to)708-723
Number of pages16
JournalEuropean Sociological Review
Volume39
Issue number5
Early online date24 Nov 2022
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work was supported by the Dutch Research Council (Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (NWO)) research talent grant for the project ‘Quality and inequality: The compensatory and multiplicative effects of school quality’ (NWO: 406-18-557, awarded to K.S., A.K., and I.M.) and a Veni grant for the project ‘Towards equal educational opportunities: The complex interaction between genes, families, and schools’ (NWO: 451-17-030, awarded to A.K.). We gratefully acknowledge research programme ‘Consortium on Individual Development’ which is funded through the Gravitation program of the Dutch Ministry of Education, Culture and Science and the NWO (NWO: 0240-001-003); ‘Decoding the gene–environment interplay of reading ability’ (NWO: 451-15-017); ‘Netherlands Twin Registry Repository: Researching the interplay between genome and environment’ (NWO: 480-15-001/674); ‘Twin-family study of individual differences in school achievement’ (NWO: 056-32-010); ‘Longitudinal data collection from teachers of Dutch twins and their siblings’ (NWO: 481-08-011); ‘KNAW Academy Professor Award’ (PAH/6635).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press.

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