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The Effects of Peer Parental Education on Student Achievement in Urban China: The Disparities Between Migrants and Locals

Authors
Kim, JinhoTong, YuyingSun, Skylar Biyang
Issue Date
8월-2021
Publisher
SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
Keywords
peer effects; education; China; migration; hukou; discrimination; culture
Citation
AMERICAN EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH JOURNAL, v.58, no.4, pp.675 - 709
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
AMERICAN EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH JOURNAL
Volume
58
Number
4
Start Page
675
End Page
709
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/127675
DOI
10.3102/0002831221989650
ISSN
0002-8312
Abstract
Despite scholarly consensus on the positive influence of peers' parental education on students' academic achievement, less is known about whether marginalized students reap similar benefits as their nonmarginalized counterparts. Using data from the China Educational Panel Survey and a quasi-experimental design, we show that the impact of classmates' parental education on test scores is significantly stronger for local students than for migrant students in urban schools. These differential effects are largely driven by rural-to-urban migrants and not by urban-to-urban migrants. Additionally, we find that rural migrant students benefit less from the positive effects of peer parental education than their local counterparts, especially when their local peers hold higher levels of discriminative attitudes toward rural migrant students in their classes.
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