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Research project
Article
Children in poverty: aspirations, expectations and attitudes to education
Date started: 01 April 2006

It has long been clear that children from deprived homes emerge from our schools with substantially lower levels of educational attainment. However, less is known about how family background influences educational attainment. By taking a life-cycle approach, starting in early childhood and moving through to compulsory schooling and beyond, this project will build a picture of the cumulative nature of educational attainment, assessing the relative importance of different factors at different stages in the lives of young people growing up in poverty.

In particular, this project aims to address the following issues:

  • What is the extent and nature of the intergenerational transmission of attitudes to education, cognitive and non-cognitive skills?
  • How much do soft skills and attitudes matter for educational attainment at different ages, for risky adolescent behaviours, and for social mobility and the perpetuation of poverty across generations?
  • What is the relative importance of early and later childhood and family background factors in determining educational outcomes?
  • What are the key behavioural and soft skills, and can they be developed more effectively?

This project makes use of four survey datasets covering children across a range of ages:

  • The Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) follows a sample of just under 19,000 children born in 2000-01.
  • The Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) follows a sample of around 14,000 women due to give birth between April 1991 and December 1992 in the former County of Avon.
  • The Longitudinal Study of Young People in England (LSYPE) follows a sample of around 15,000 individuals aged 13/14 in 2003-04.
  • The British Cohort Study (BCS) follows a sample of around 17,000 individuals born in a particular week of April 1970.

Note: This work is being carried out in collaboration with the Centre for Market and Public Organisation (CMPO) based at the University of Bristol.

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22 September 2010
Presentations
Article
These slides were presented at a Society for Longitudinal and Life Course Studies Conference, Clare College, Cambridge.
29 March 2010
External publications
Article
This report examines the extent to which the aspirations, attitudes and behaviour of parents and children can help explain why poor children typically do worse at school than children from richer backgrounds. It is based on the analysis of a number of large-scale longitudinal data sources capturing groups of children in the UK from early childhood through to late adolescence.
30 September 2009
Observations
Article
Gordon Brown's speech to the Labour party conference confirmed that, if it wins the general election, the Government will provide free early education and childcare places for 2 year old children in low-income families in England by 2015, to be funded by scrapping the tax break on employer-provided childcare vouchers. Who will win and lose from this change, and what does it tell us about the Government's priorities?

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