Abstract

Socio-spatial inequality and school inequality are strongly related. Where people live affects the opportunities individuals have in life, such as the opportunity to send your children to a good school. The level of urbanisation is related to the number of options people have to choose good schools, so more urbanised areas likely offer more options for good schools. However, the families that can choose good schools are likely families with high income or education levels. Data for this study come from two waves of the Taiwan Youth Project (N = 2,893), which consists of two cohorts of students from 162 classrooms in 40 junior high schools in northern Taiwan. When school quality is proxied by socioeconomic status (SES), the results show that, in general, students from the most urbanised areas, wealthier parents, and higher-educated parents, are more likely to go to higher SES schools. However, the strongest effects are for higher income and higher-educated parents in the most urbanised areas. This suggests that in the most urbanised areas, families have the most options regarding school choice, and richer and more educated families are better able to circumvent school catchment areas, either because they can afford an address in a better catchment area or because they understand the importance of school choice.

Highlights

  • School quality plays a crucial role in chances for a good education

  • Model 1 shows that students from less urbanised areas are more likely to attend lower-income schools, which is in line with hypothesis 1a and the descriptive results from Table 3

  • School inequality has a crucial influence on educational outcomes and life opportunities

Read more

Summary

Introduction

School quality plays a crucial role in chances for a good education. Good schools provide students with higher learning outcomes and nonmaterial resources, such as social and cultural capital to succeed in a work environment (Bourdieu, 1977; Lareau, 1987). Education is known as the most effective path to upward social mobility for disadvantaged children by creating an equitable distribution of learning outcomes (Downey & Condron, 2016). Social Inclusion, 2021, Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages 142–153 study, we focus on the case of Taiwan, where educational inequality is emphasised as a concern by several studies G. Chen, 2001; Mao, 2015), but is understudied when it comes to spatial processes (Nieuwenhuis, 2020; Nieuwenhuis & Hooimeijer, 2016)

Objectives
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call