Do family and neighbourhood matter in secondary school completion? A multilevel study of determinants and their interactions in a life-course perspective.

BACKGROUND:Completion of secondary education is important for individuals' future health and health behaviour. The fundamental purpose of this study is to investigate the variation and clustering of school completion in families and neighbourhoods. Secondly, we aim to examine the impact of indi...

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Main Authors: Arnhild Myhr, Monica Lillefjell, Geir Arild Espnes, Thomas Halvorsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5319759?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-df0e4db352d843aca1739d8f35ce074a2020-11-25T01:58:44ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-01122e017228110.1371/journal.pone.0172281Do family and neighbourhood matter in secondary school completion? A multilevel study of determinants and their interactions in a life-course perspective.Arnhild MyhrMonica LillefjellGeir Arild EspnesThomas HalvorsenBACKGROUND:Completion of secondary education is important for individuals' future health and health behaviour. The fundamental purpose of this study is to investigate the variation and clustering of school completion in families and neighbourhoods. Secondly, we aim to examine the impact of individuals' family structure and neighbourhood of residence and examine to what extent parental education level moderates these associations. METHODS:Longitudinal register data for 30% of the entire Norwegian population aged 21-27 years in 2010 (N = 107,003) was extracted from Statistic Norway´s event database. Three-level logistic regression models, which incorporated individual, family, and neighbourhood contextual factors, were applied to estimate the family and neighbourhood general contextual effects and detect possible educational differences in the impact of family structure and urban place of residence in school completion. RESULTS:Completion rates were significantly higher within families with higher education level (79% in tertiary educated families vs. 61% and 48% in secondary and primary educated families respectively) and were strongly correlated within families (ICC = 39.6) and neighbourhoods (ICC = 5.7). Several structural factors at the family level negatively associated with school completion (e.g., family disruption, large family size, and young maternal age) were more prevalent and displayed more negative impact among primary educated individuals. Urban residence was associated with school completion, but only among the tertiary educated. CONCLUSIONS:Investment in the resources in the individuals' immediate surroundings, including family and neighbourhood, may address a substantial portion of the social inequalities in the completion of upper secondary education. The high intra-familial correlation in school completion suggests that public health policies and future research should acknowledge family environments in order to improve secondary education completion rates among young people within lower educated families.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5319759?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Arnhild Myhr
Monica Lillefjell
Geir Arild Espnes
Thomas Halvorsen
spellingShingle Arnhild Myhr
Monica Lillefjell
Geir Arild Espnes
Thomas Halvorsen
Do family and neighbourhood matter in secondary school completion? A multilevel study of determinants and their interactions in a life-course perspective.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Arnhild Myhr
Monica Lillefjell
Geir Arild Espnes
Thomas Halvorsen
author_sort Arnhild Myhr
title Do family and neighbourhood matter in secondary school completion? A multilevel study of determinants and their interactions in a life-course perspective.
title_short Do family and neighbourhood matter in secondary school completion? A multilevel study of determinants and their interactions in a life-course perspective.
title_full Do family and neighbourhood matter in secondary school completion? A multilevel study of determinants and their interactions in a life-course perspective.
title_fullStr Do family and neighbourhood matter in secondary school completion? A multilevel study of determinants and their interactions in a life-course perspective.
title_full_unstemmed Do family and neighbourhood matter in secondary school completion? A multilevel study of determinants and their interactions in a life-course perspective.
title_sort do family and neighbourhood matter in secondary school completion? a multilevel study of determinants and their interactions in a life-course perspective.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description BACKGROUND:Completion of secondary education is important for individuals' future health and health behaviour. The fundamental purpose of this study is to investigate the variation and clustering of school completion in families and neighbourhoods. Secondly, we aim to examine the impact of individuals' family structure and neighbourhood of residence and examine to what extent parental education level moderates these associations. METHODS:Longitudinal register data for 30% of the entire Norwegian population aged 21-27 years in 2010 (N = 107,003) was extracted from Statistic Norway´s event database. Three-level logistic regression models, which incorporated individual, family, and neighbourhood contextual factors, were applied to estimate the family and neighbourhood general contextual effects and detect possible educational differences in the impact of family structure and urban place of residence in school completion. RESULTS:Completion rates were significantly higher within families with higher education level (79% in tertiary educated families vs. 61% and 48% in secondary and primary educated families respectively) and were strongly correlated within families (ICC = 39.6) and neighbourhoods (ICC = 5.7). Several structural factors at the family level negatively associated with school completion (e.g., family disruption, large family size, and young maternal age) were more prevalent and displayed more negative impact among primary educated individuals. Urban residence was associated with school completion, but only among the tertiary educated. CONCLUSIONS:Investment in the resources in the individuals' immediate surroundings, including family and neighbourhood, may address a substantial portion of the social inequalities in the completion of upper secondary education. The high intra-familial correlation in school completion suggests that public health policies and future research should acknowledge family environments in order to improve secondary education completion rates among young people within lower educated families.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5319759?pdf=render
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