Abstract

Previous research has extensively addressed social disparity in education using certain aspects, including the stress differences between students from nonacademic families and those from academic families during the transition from secondary school to a university. However, this issue has not yet been fully understood; the current literature suggests contradictory predictions, and physiological indicators of stress have never been assessed. Therefore, we tested whether hair cortisol concentrations (HCCs) in first semester students from nonacademic families are different from those of first semester students from academic families during their first six weeks at university. We analyzed hair samples and parental educational background reports from 71 female first semester students at a university in Switzerland in two waves (n = 34 in the autumn of 2016 and n = 37 in the autumn of 2017). The HCCs were extracted from the hair using a well-established protocol. The analyses revealed higher HCCs in the students from the academic families across the two cohorts. This difference could not be attributed to different control variables (e.g., age, migration background). These preliminary findings were in line with the sociological theory that an academic parental background is associated with pressure to avoid a drop in one's social status.

Highlights

  • Social scientists have long examined the social disparities in higher education [1, 2]

  • Given the expected significant main effect of parental educational background, it would become clear by the coding of the variable in which of the two groups the hair cortisol concentrations (HCCs) was significantly higher

  • A significant interaction between parental educational background and data collection wave would indicate that the expected difference between the nonacademic group and the academic group was different for the two waves [30]

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Summary

Introduction

Social scientists have long examined the social disparities in higher education [1, 2]. In order to accomplish this, researchers have often looked at the different transitional stages of educational systems. Social disparity during the transition from a secondary school to a university is not yet fully understood. The studies of social disparities are based on selfreports and questionnaires. Physiological measurements may be very useful in this realm, especially regarding the measurement of stress which is a relevant variable in terms of social disparity [3,4,5]. We applied an interdisciplinary approach by relating the students' social status (i.e., parental educational background) to their chronic physiological stress status in the early university freshman stage

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