Gender, parental education, and ability: their interacting roles in predicting GCSE success

We investigate the relations between gender, parental education, ability, and educational achievement in Britain, focusing on the way in which gender and parental education interact with ability to contribute to a pupil’s obtaining secondary school qualifications. This allows us to provide evidence relevant to claims concerning the effects of differences in the way in which working- and middle-class familial cultures interact with gender-specific behaviour in school. Given the configurational nature of the processes likely to be involved, we employ Ragin’s Qualitative Comparative Analysis as our method. We find that, in both academically selective and non-selective schools, high ability is a quasi-sufficient condition for obtaining certain levels of qualification, but that at lower levels of ability, either being female or having highly educated parents (or both) have to be present, too. Boys without highly educated parents perform less well than girls from a similar background.

[1]  P. Bourdieu,et al.  Reproduction in education, society and culture , 1970 .

[2]  J. Earman,et al.  The Cement Of The Universe , 1974 .

[3]  P. Piccone,et al.  For Sociology , 1974, Telos.

[4]  Natalie Rogoff Ramsöy On Education, opportunity, and social inequality , 1975 .

[5]  J. Richardson Handbook of Theory and Research for the Sociology of Education , 1986 .

[6]  N. D. Pidgen,et al.  The Comparative Method , 1987 .

[7]  Robert K. Merton,et al.  Three Fragments From a Sociologist's Notebooks: Establishing the Phenomenon, Specified Ignorance, and Strategic Research Materials , 1987 .

[8]  Graham Bell,et al.  A Comparative Method , 1989, The American Naturalist.

[9]  Edward M. Hundert,et al.  The Cement of the Universe , 1990 .

[10]  H. Blossfeld,et al.  Persistent Inequality: Changing Educational Attainment in Thirteen Countries , 1994 .

[11]  W. Müller,et al.  Bildungsungleichheit im Sozialen Wandel , 1997 .

[12]  J. Goldthorpe,et al.  EXPLAINING EDUCATIONAL DIFFERENTIALS , 1997 .

[13]  Jan O. Jonsson,et al.  Can education be equalized? : the Swedish case in comparative perspective , 1998 .

[14]  W. Müller Erwartete und unerwartete Folgen der Bildungsexpansion , 1998 .

[15]  R. Becker Klassenlage und Bildungsentscheidungen , 2000 .

[16]  H. Lucey Social class, gender and schooling , 2001 .

[17]  B. Francis,et al.  Investigating Gender: Contemporary Perspectives in Education , 2002 .

[18]  P. Bourdieu Forms of Capital , 2002 .

[19]  M. Hammersley Obvious, all too obvious? Methodological issues in using sex/gender as a variable in educational research , 2002 .

[20]  Peter Tymms,et al.  Celebration of the Success of Distributed Research with Schools: The CEM Centre, Durham. , 2003 .

[21]  J. Walkup Fuzzy-set social science , 2003 .

[22]  Becky Francis,et al.  Reassessing Gender and Achievement: Questioning Contemporary Key Debates , 2005 .

[23]  B. Francis,et al.  Reassessing gender and achievement , 2005 .

[24]  Charles C. Ragin 1 From Fuzzy Sets to Crisp Truth Tables , 2005 .

[25]  Barry Cooper,et al.  Applying Ragin's Crisp and Fuzzy Set QCA to Large Datasets: Social Class and Educational Achievement in the National Child Development Study , 2005 .

[26]  Gary Goertz,et al.  A Tale of Two Cultures: Contrasting Quantitative and Qualitative Research , 2006, Political Analysis.

[27]  Thomas A. DiPrete,et al.  The Growing Female Advantage in College Completion: The Role of Family Background and Academic Achievement , 2006 .

[28]  A. Keddie Negotiating and Enabling Spaces for Gender Justice. , 2006 .

[29]  Charles C. Ragin,et al.  The Limitations of Net-Effects Thinking , 2006 .

[30]  D. Entwisle,et al.  Early Schooling: The Handicap of Being Poor and Male , 2007 .

[31]  Thomas A. DiPrete,et al.  Gender Inequalities in Education , 2008 .

[32]  Judith Glaesser,et al.  How has Educational Expansion Changed the Necessary and Sufficient Conditions for Achieving Professional, Managerial and Technical Class Positions in Britain? A Configurational Analysis , 2008 .

[33]  J. Abraham Back to the future on gender and anti‐school boys: a response to Jeffrey Smith , 2008 .

[34]  D. Zyngier Doing it to (for) boys (again): do we really need more books telling us there is a problem with boys’ underachievement in education? , 2009 .

[35]  Judith Glaesser,et al.  Contrasting Variable-Analytic and Case-Based Approaches to the Analysis of Survey Datasets: Exploring How Achievement Varies by Ability across Configurations of Social Class and Sex , 2010 .

[36]  R. Luijkx,et al.  Long-term trends in educational inequality in Europe: Class inequalities and gender differences , 2010 .

[37]  Judith Glaesser,et al.  Selectivity and Flexibility in the German Secondary School System: A Configurational Analysis of Recent Data from the German Socio-Economic Panel , 2011 .

[38]  Martyn Hammersley,et al.  Challenging the Qualitative-Quantitative Divide: Explorations in Case-focused Causal Analysis , 2012 .

[39]  Thomas Elliott,et al.  FUZZY SET QUALITATIVE COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS , 2013 .