Neighborhood and family influences on educational attainment: results from the Ontario child health study follow-up 2001.

Child Dev

Offord Centre for Child Studies, McMaster University Faculty of Health Sciences, and Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation, Chedoke Division, Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation, Box 2000, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.

Published: May 2007

This study uses multilevel models to examine longitudinal associations between contextual influences (neighborhood and family) assessed in 1983 in a cohort of 2,355 children, 4-16 years of age, and educational attainment in 2001. Variation in educational attainment in 2001 attributable to between-neighborhood and between-family differences was 8.17% and 36.88%, respectively. The final model explained 33.64% of the variance in educational attainment, with unique variances of 14.53% for neighborhood and family-level variables combined versus 10.94% for child-level variables. Among the neighborhood and family-level variables, indicators of status (5.29%) versus parental capacity/family process (4.03%) made comparable predictions to attainment while children from economically disadvantaged families did not benefit educationally from living in more affluent areas.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8624.2007.00991.xDOI Listing

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