AI Article Synopsis

  • Exposure to family risk factors like lower parental socioeconomic status (SES) can hinder adolescents' educational levels, but some still succeed.
  • Data from the Dutch TRAILS cohort study found that factors such as effortful control and peer support were not effective in mitigating the negative impacts of low parental SES and family support on education.
  • The findings suggest that while higher parental SES leads to better educational outcomes, individual strengths like effortful control may have a positive direct impact, indicating a need for other strategies to address socioeconomic disparities in education.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Exposure to family risk factors increases adolescents' chances of attaining a lower educational level. However, some adolescents attain a high educational level despite being exposed to family risk factors such as a lower parental socioeconomic status (SES) or receiving less family support.

Method: Using data from the Dutch TRAILS cohort study (N = 2175; M = 11.1, SD = 0.55, 50.8% female), we investigated if higher levels of effortful control and peer support can buffer against the negative effects of a lower parental SES and less family support on educational level. Two multinomial logistic regressions were performed (from early to mid-adolescence and from mid-adolescence to young adulthood) with post hoc tests to contrast four ordinal educational levels: practical vocational, theoretical vocational, higher general, and (pre-)university.

Results: Adolescents with a higher parental SES were consistently more likely to end up at a higher educational level, but family support was hardly associated with educational level. Neither effortful control nor peer support buffered the associations of parental SES and family support with educational level. Effortful control did have a positive direct (compensatory) effect on the educational level.

Conclusion: We conclude that other individual competencies or more structural changes may be more helpful buffers for reducing socioeconomic inequalities in educational attainment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11618718PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jad.12389DOI Listing

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