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Increased stakes in educational achievement
explain why today’s anxious parents engage in intensive parenting styles
Parents now engage in much more intensive
parenting styles compared to a few decades ago. Today’s parents supervise
their children more closely, spend more time interacting with them, help
much more with homework, and place more emphasis on educational achievement.
More intensive parenting has also led to more unequal parenting: highly
educated parents with high incomes have increased their parenting
investments the most, leading to a growing “parenting gap” in society. These
trends can contribute to declining social mobility and further exacerbate
rising inequality, which raises the question of how policymakers should
respond.
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Students do worse if their abilities fail to
match the requirements of the institutions where they matriculate
A growing body of research has begun to examine
the match between student ability and university quality. Initial research
focused on overmatch—where students are lower attaining than their college
peers. However, more recently, attention has turned to undermatch, where
students attend institutions with lower attaining peers. Both have been
shown to matter for student outcomes; while in theory overmatch could be
desirable, there is evidence that overmatched students are less likely to
graduate college. Undermatched students, meanwhile, have been shown to
experience lower graduate earnings.
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Education benefits individuals, but the societal benefits are
likely even greater
Formal schooling increases earnings and provides other
individual benefits. However, societal benefits of education may exceed individual benefits.
Research finds that higher average education levels in an area are correlated with higher
earnings, even for local residents with minimal education. Science, technology, engineering,
and mathematics (STEM) graduates appear to generate especially strong external effects, due to
their role in stimulating innovation and economic growth. Several strategies to test for
causality find human capital externalities do exist.
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Preschool improves child outcomes, especially
for disadvantaged children
Children from disadvantaged families have lower
levels of school readiness when they enter school than do children from more
advantaged families. Many countries have tried to reduce this inequality
through publicly provided preschool. Evidence on the potential of these
programs to reduce inequality in child development is now quite strong.
Long-term studies of large publicly funded programs in Europe and Latin
America, and newer studies on state and local prekindergarten programs
implemented more recently in the US, find that the programs do improve
outcomes for young children, particularly for those from disadvantaged
families.
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Shortening secondary school duration may
increase the skilled workforce in aging societies
The main goal of secondary school education in
developed countries is to prepare students for higher education and the
labor market. That demands high investments in study duration and
specialized fields to meet rising skill requirements. However, these demands
for more education are in opposition to calls for early entry to the labor
market, to lengthen working lives to meet the rising costs associated with
an aging population and to enable the intergenerational transfer of skills.
One way to lengthen working lives is to shorten the duration of secondary
school, an option recently implemented in Canada and Germany. The empirical
evidence shows mixed effects.
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Raising future expected monetary gains to
schooling and poor families’ current incomes promotes school enrollment in
developing countries
Universal completion of secondary education by
2030 is among the targets set by the United Nations’ Sustainable Development
Goals. Higher expected adult wages traced to schooling may play a major role
in reaching this target as they are predicted to induce increased school
enrollment for children whose families wish to optimally invest in their
children’s future. However, low incomes and the obligation to meet immediate
needs may forestall such investment. Studies suggest that school enrollment
in developing countries is positively correlated with higher expected future
wages, but poor families continue to under-enroll their children.
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Expanding higher education might solve rising
youth unemployment and widening inequality in Africa
Developing countries often face two well-known
structural problems: high youth unemployment and high inequality. In recent
decades, policymakers have increased the share of government spending on
education in developing countries to address both of these issues. The
empirical literature offers mixed results on which type of education is most
suitable to improve gainful employment and reduce inequality: is it primary,
secondary, or tertiary education? Investigating recent literature on the
returns to education in selected developing countries in Africa can help to
answer this question.
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Postponing school tracking can increase social
mobility without significant adverse effects on educational achievement
The goal of school tracking (assigning students
to different types of school by ability) is to increase educational
efficiency by creating more homogeneous groups of students that are easier
to teach. However, there are concerns that, if begun too early in the
schooling process, tracking may improve educational attainment at the cost
of reduced intergenerational social mobility. Recent empirical evidence
finds no evidence of an efficiency–equality trade-off when tracking is
postponed.
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