AI Article Synopsis

  • Selective schools tend to have students who perform better on national exams compared to non-selective schools, a difference often linked to factors like school selection criteria and socioeconomic status.
  • A study analyzed the genetic differences among students from different school types, revealing that those in non-selective schools had lower genetic predispositions for academic achievement compared to students in selective schools.
  • However, when accounting for factors affecting school admissions, genetic differences between student groups diminished, indicating that the initial performance disparities were mainly due to heritable traits influencing pupil selection rather than inherent differences in genetics.

Article Abstract

On average, students attending selective schools outperform their non-selective counterparts in national exams. These differences are often attributed to value added by the school, as well as factors schools use to select pupils, including ability, achievement and, in cases where schools charge tuition fees or are located in affluent areas, socioeconomic status. However, the possible role of DNA differences between students of different schools types has not yet been considered. We used a UK-representative sample of 4814 genotyped students to investigate exam performance at age 16 and genetic differences between students in three school types: state-funded, non-selective schools ('non-selective'), state-funded, selective schools ('grammar') and private schools, which are selective ('private'). We created a genome-wide polygenic score (GPS) derived from a genome-wide association study of years of education (). We found substantial mean genetic differences between students of different school types: students in non-selective schools had lower GPS compared to those in grammar ( = 0.41) and private schools ( = 0.37). Three times as many students in the top GPS decile went to a selective school compared to the bottom decile. These results were mirrored in the exam differences between school types. However, once we controlled for factors involved in pupil selection, there were no significant genetic differences between school types, and the variance in exam scores at age 16 explained by school type dropped from 7% to <1%. These results show that genetic and exam differences between school types are primarily due to the heritable characteristics involved in pupil admission.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6220309PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41539-018-0019-8DOI Listing

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