Abstract

This paper focuses on the territorial distribution of students with an immigrant background enrolled in the 3rd cycle of basic education in Portugal and on the differences in the academic performance of students enrolled in the last year of this cycle based on their birthplace and immigrant background when compared to their native peers in the Lisbon Metropolitan Area. These differences are examined by estimating several linear regression models using as dependent variable three performance indicators – student’s results in the 9th grade national exams in the Maths and Portuguese Language subjects, as well as a binary indicator of a successful academic record during the 3rd cycle. The observed results confirm the hypothesis that there are significant differences in the students’ academic performance depending on their immigrant background and birthplace: (i) 2nd-generation and 1st-generation students perform worse than Native students; (ii) students from Brazil and PALOP countries have the most significant differences compared to students from Portugal. We also identify that a substantial part of these differences is already present in the end of the 2nd cycle of basic education. Furthermore, our results indicate that a considerable part of the differences is explained by factors inherent to the school and the class of the student, and not so much to the municipality, which might indicate the existence of some type of segregation experienced by these students, either at intra-municipality level (by the different schools) or intra-school level (by the different classes).

Highlights

  • Since the 1990s, migrations to Portugal have intensified: the immigrants that arrive in the country come from many different origins, and the newcomers undertake a broader range of integration processes in the national territory (Esteves, Hortas & Fonseca, 2017; Fonseca, 2008; Malheiros & Esteves, 2013; Malheiros & Fonseca, 2011)

  • We explored the anonymised database of the Ministry of Education Information System (MISI) of the Directorate-General for Education and Science Statistics (DGEEC), which gathers data on pre-school education and basic and secondary education in state schools in Mainland Portugal

  • The results shown in this column complement those presented in column (3), exhibiting that students from certain immigrant backgrounds are, generally, enrolled in classes where their Native peers perform below average, and that this difference in academic performance is only partially explained by socioeconomic factors and is the result of other factors related to the student’s school or class

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Summary

Introduction

Since the 1990s, migrations to Portugal have intensified: the immigrants that arrive in the country come from many different origins, and the newcomers undertake a broader range of integration processes in the national territory (Esteves, Hortas & Fonseca, 2017; Fonseca, 2008; Malheiros & Esteves, 2013; Malheiros & Fonseca, 2011). Given the considerable number of children and adolescents included in these processes, education is considered one of the most important dimensions of integration because (i) children and adolescents have a universal right to education, and (ii) an educational response is necessary to improve performance in light of the challenges faced in a society where migrants are disadvantaged (Koehler & Schneider, 2019). It is important to understand to what extent national administrative data demonstrate this positive evolution towards the reduction of the disadvantages of immigrant students compared to their native peers

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