Ethnic background,social class or status? Developments in school attainment of the children of immigrants in The Netherlands |
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Authors: | Rob de Lange Jan CC Rupp |
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Institution: | 1. Lecturer in the Department of Journalism , School for Higher Education Midden Nederland , Utrecht;2. Research Fellow of the Postdoctoral Institute for Social Science , University of Amsterdam;3. Kromme Nieuwe Gracht 35A, Utrecht, 3512 HD, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | In the field of education and children of immigrants we are confronted with a peculiar clash of opinions. Some believe that the differences in school attainment between indigenous children and children of immigrant families can be explained in terms of social class. Others seek the differences in terms of status groups. Empirical research was carried out in one of the bigger cities of The Netherlands, which attempted to further this theoretical debate. The results indicate that the influence of an immigrant background on school attainment is largely mediated by both social class and status. Ethnicity, however, also has a specific effect on education, independent of social class and status. It is argued that the characteristic of ethnicity is a sociological kind of motivation. The educational motivation of immigrant families can have a ‘positive’ effect in the sense that ‘black’ schools perform reasonably well, and a ‘negative’ effect in the sense that immigrant children at schools with a high level of aspiration perform less well than their indigenous Dutch schoolmates. |
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