Early tracking and immigrant optimism: a comparative study of educational aspirations among students in disadvantaged schools in Sweden and the Netherlands

Abstract Educational tracking affects both the trajectories and the composition of peers that students meet in school. This study compares the effect of significant others on students’ educational aspirations within two transition regimes: the more comprehensive Swedish system and the more stratifie...

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Main Author: Olav Nygård
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-12-01
Series:Comparative Migration Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-017-0063-1
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spelling doaj-26b55b20a36c4eb5b07dc91746486e352020-11-24T23:26:20ZengSpringerOpenComparative Migration Studies2214-594X2017-12-015111810.1186/s40878-017-0063-1Early tracking and immigrant optimism: a comparative study of educational aspirations among students in disadvantaged schools in Sweden and the NetherlandsOlav Nygård0ISV-REMESO, Linköping UniversityAbstract Educational tracking affects both the trajectories and the composition of peers that students meet in school. This study compares the effect of significant others on students’ educational aspirations within two transition regimes: the more comprehensive Swedish system and the more stratified Dutch. Separating between doxic and habituated aspirations, I hypothesize that (1) aspirations among students in disadvantaged schools will be lower in the Netherlands than in Sweden; (2) the higher educational aspirations of girls and children of immigrants will disappear when significant others are controlled for; and (3) the positive effect of significant others is more marked among Swedish students than among Dutch due to greater student heterogeneity. The data comes from 3202 students in schools with low average grades in Sweden and the Netherlands. Results were in line with the hypothesis with one important exception. There was a marked difference in habituated aspirations but no difference in doxic aspirations between the Dutch and Swedish students. In conclusion, the findings suggest a) that early tracking systems creates a disconnect between students’ hopes and what they perceive as likely outcomes, and b) that the phenomenon termed “immigrant optimism” and “ethnic capital” reflects unequal access to social capital.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-017-0063-1Educational trackingDoxic aspirationsHabituated aspirationsSocial capitalImmigrant optimism
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olav Nygård
spellingShingle Olav Nygård
Early tracking and immigrant optimism: a comparative study of educational aspirations among students in disadvantaged schools in Sweden and the Netherlands
Comparative Migration Studies
Educational tracking
Doxic aspirations
Habituated aspirations
Social capital
Immigrant optimism
author_facet Olav Nygård
author_sort Olav Nygård
title Early tracking and immigrant optimism: a comparative study of educational aspirations among students in disadvantaged schools in Sweden and the Netherlands
title_short Early tracking and immigrant optimism: a comparative study of educational aspirations among students in disadvantaged schools in Sweden and the Netherlands
title_full Early tracking and immigrant optimism: a comparative study of educational aspirations among students in disadvantaged schools in Sweden and the Netherlands
title_fullStr Early tracking and immigrant optimism: a comparative study of educational aspirations among students in disadvantaged schools in Sweden and the Netherlands
title_full_unstemmed Early tracking and immigrant optimism: a comparative study of educational aspirations among students in disadvantaged schools in Sweden and the Netherlands
title_sort early tracking and immigrant optimism: a comparative study of educational aspirations among students in disadvantaged schools in sweden and the netherlands
publisher SpringerOpen
series Comparative Migration Studies
issn 2214-594X
publishDate 2017-12-01
description Abstract Educational tracking affects both the trajectories and the composition of peers that students meet in school. This study compares the effect of significant others on students’ educational aspirations within two transition regimes: the more comprehensive Swedish system and the more stratified Dutch. Separating between doxic and habituated aspirations, I hypothesize that (1) aspirations among students in disadvantaged schools will be lower in the Netherlands than in Sweden; (2) the higher educational aspirations of girls and children of immigrants will disappear when significant others are controlled for; and (3) the positive effect of significant others is more marked among Swedish students than among Dutch due to greater student heterogeneity. The data comes from 3202 students in schools with low average grades in Sweden and the Netherlands. Results were in line with the hypothesis with one important exception. There was a marked difference in habituated aspirations but no difference in doxic aspirations between the Dutch and Swedish students. In conclusion, the findings suggest a) that early tracking systems creates a disconnect between students’ hopes and what they perceive as likely outcomes, and b) that the phenomenon termed “immigrant optimism” and “ethnic capital” reflects unequal access to social capital.
topic Educational tracking
Doxic aspirations
Habituated aspirations
Social capital
Immigrant optimism
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40878-017-0063-1
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