Educated parents and educated kids: A new study

13.05.2024 21:24

Most people know that well-educated parents tend to have educated kids as well, but what happens when two parents have different types of education?

In a unique global study, a gender-sensitive approach was taken to understand intergenerational educational mobility.

Let's find out more!

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It's not that simple

Surprisingly, education expansion hasn't necessarily increased educational opportunities for kids from diverse parental education backgrounds.

The research highlights the growing importance of a mother's educational status in shaping their kids' educational mobility, particularly in regions like Africa, Asia, the Pacific, and also Europe.

The specialists analyzed a vast global dataset of 1.79 million people born between 1955 and 1990 from different societies, representing about 89% of the whole world's population.

As gender equality rises, the link between a mother's educational status and her kids' educational mobility strengthens when mothers are paired with not so educated fathers.

Conversely, in less gender-equal contexts with more mothers matched with highly educated fathers, the mother-daughter association weakens.

Why is it important?

This study emphasizes the need for a gender-sensitive approach to understand social mobility accurately.

The rising importance of mothers' education challenges the traditional patriarchal measurement of intergenerational mobility and calls for more inclusive strategies globally.

As single-parent families, especially those led by single mothers, increase worldwide, the influence of mothers in shaping kids' social mobility may further grow.
 

Kate Yakimchuk Author: Kate Yakimchuk Editor internet resource


Content
  1. It's not that simple
  2. Why is it important?