Is the Effect of Parental Education on Offspring Biased or Moderated by Genotype?

Parental education is the strongest measured predictor of offspring education, and thus many scholars see the parent–child correlation in educational attainment as an important measure of social mobility. But if social changes or policy interventions are going to have dynastic effects, we need to kn...

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Main Authors: Dalton Conley, Benjamin W. Domingue, David Cesarini, Christopher Dawes, Cornelius A. Rietveld, Jason D. Boardman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society for Sociological Science 2015-02-01
Series:Sociological Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.sociologicalscience.com/download/volume-2/february/SocSci_v2_82to105.pdf
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spelling doaj-5aba8e54477343adb5fc0d0075becaa72020-11-25T01:48:48ZengSociety for Sociological ScienceSociological Science2330-66962015-02-01268210510.15195/v2.a6Is the Effect of Parental Education on Offspring Biased or Moderated by Genotype?Dalton Conley0Benjamin W. Domingue1David Cesarini2Christopher Dawes3Cornelius A. Rietveld4Jason D. Boardman5Department of Sociology, New York UniversityInstitute of Behavioral Science, University of Colorado BoulderCenter for Experimental Social Science, Department of Economics, New York UniversityWilff Family Department of Politics, New York UniversityErasmus School of Economics and Erasmus University Rotterdam Institute for Behavior and Biology, Erasmus UniversityInstitute of Behavioral Science and Department of Sociology, University of Colorado BoulderParental education is the strongest measured predictor of offspring education, and thus many scholars see the parent–child correlation in educational attainment as an important measure of social mobility. But if social changes or policy interventions are going to have dynastic effects, we need to know what accounts for this intergenerational association, that is, whether it is primarily environmental or genetic in origin. Thus, to understand whether the estimated social influence of parental education on offspring education is biased owing to genetic inheritance (or moderated by it), we exploit the findings from a recent large genome-wide association study of educational attainment to construct a genetic score designed to predict educational attainment. Using data from two independent samples, we find that our genetic score significantly predicts years of schooling in both between-family and within-family analyses. We report three findings that should be of interest to scholars in the stratification and education fields. First, raw parent–child correlations in education may reflect one-sixth genetic transmission and five-sixths social inheritance. Second, conditional on a child’s genetic score, a parental genetic score has no statistically significant relationship to the child’s educational attainment. Third, the effects of offspring genotype do not seem to be moderated by measured sociodemographic variables at the parental level (but parent–child genetic interaction effects are significant). These results are consistent with the existence of two separate systems of ascription: genetic inheritance (a random lottery within families) and social inheritance (across-family ascription). We caution, however, that at the presently attainable levels of explanatory power, these results are preliminary and may change when better-powered genetic risk scores are developed.https://www.sociologicalscience.com/download/volume-2/february/SocSci_v2_82to105.pdfGene-by-EnvironmentGenotypeHeritabilityParental EducationStatus Attainment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dalton Conley
Benjamin W. Domingue
David Cesarini
Christopher Dawes
Cornelius A. Rietveld
Jason D. Boardman
spellingShingle Dalton Conley
Benjamin W. Domingue
David Cesarini
Christopher Dawes
Cornelius A. Rietveld
Jason D. Boardman
Is the Effect of Parental Education on Offspring Biased or Moderated by Genotype?
Sociological Science
Gene-by-Environment
Genotype
Heritability
Parental Education
Status Attainment
author_facet Dalton Conley
Benjamin W. Domingue
David Cesarini
Christopher Dawes
Cornelius A. Rietveld
Jason D. Boardman
author_sort Dalton Conley
title Is the Effect of Parental Education on Offspring Biased or Moderated by Genotype?
title_short Is the Effect of Parental Education on Offspring Biased or Moderated by Genotype?
title_full Is the Effect of Parental Education on Offspring Biased or Moderated by Genotype?
title_fullStr Is the Effect of Parental Education on Offspring Biased or Moderated by Genotype?
title_full_unstemmed Is the Effect of Parental Education on Offspring Biased or Moderated by Genotype?
title_sort is the effect of parental education on offspring biased or moderated by genotype?
publisher Society for Sociological Science
series Sociological Science
issn 2330-6696
publishDate 2015-02-01
description Parental education is the strongest measured predictor of offspring education, and thus many scholars see the parent–child correlation in educational attainment as an important measure of social mobility. But if social changes or policy interventions are going to have dynastic effects, we need to know what accounts for this intergenerational association, that is, whether it is primarily environmental or genetic in origin. Thus, to understand whether the estimated social influence of parental education on offspring education is biased owing to genetic inheritance (or moderated by it), we exploit the findings from a recent large genome-wide association study of educational attainment to construct a genetic score designed to predict educational attainment. Using data from two independent samples, we find that our genetic score significantly predicts years of schooling in both between-family and within-family analyses. We report three findings that should be of interest to scholars in the stratification and education fields. First, raw parent–child correlations in education may reflect one-sixth genetic transmission and five-sixths social inheritance. Second, conditional on a child’s genetic score, a parental genetic score has no statistically significant relationship to the child’s educational attainment. Third, the effects of offspring genotype do not seem to be moderated by measured sociodemographic variables at the parental level (but parent–child genetic interaction effects are significant). These results are consistent with the existence of two separate systems of ascription: genetic inheritance (a random lottery within families) and social inheritance (across-family ascription). We caution, however, that at the presently attainable levels of explanatory power, these results are preliminary and may change when better-powered genetic risk scores are developed.
topic Gene-by-Environment
Genotype
Heritability
Parental Education
Status Attainment
url https://www.sociologicalscience.com/download/volume-2/february/SocSci_v2_82to105.pdf
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