Abstract

Increasing demands in schools, higher pressure on children’s performance levels, and increasing mental health constraints raise questions about the impact of educational achievement on children’s life satisfaction. Therefore, this study investigates whether children’s academic competence levels and school grades affect their life satisfaction and if the effects vary by educational track. Complementing prior research, this study firstly uses fixed effects regressions to get closer to the estimation of the causal link between children’s academic competencies, school grades, and life satisfaction by eliminating time-constant confounding factors such as intelligence, early background characteristics, and genetic factors. By using valuable longitudinal data on academic competencies, school grades, and life satisfaction of children from a sample of 5th-grade students (N = 3045) of the National Educational Panel Study in Germany (NEPS) from 2010 to 2015 this study reaches also a broader external validity than prior research. Including various tracks, makes testing for heterogeneous effects by school track attended possible. Results indicate that, on average, children’s school grades seem to be highly important for their life evaluations. Moreover, the effect of school grades does not vary across educational tracks, i.e. school grades seem to matter for all children. In contrast, levels of academic competencies seem to be relevant only for specific subgroups. Investigating effect heterogeneities reveals that only among children in the lower secondary school tracks higher competencies are related to lower life satisfaction. Overall, the study highlights the importance of school grades and point out variation in the relevance of competence levels between school tracks.

Highlights

  • High levels of mental health problems around the world are one of the most serious challenges in modern societies and about 50% of mental health problems in adulthood can be attributed to childhood and early adolescence (World Health Organization, 2018, 2019)

  • This study uses data of starting cohort 3 (5th graders) of the National Educational Panel Study in Germany (NEPS) in Germany, which is the first to allow for longitudinal analysis of the effect of competence levels and school grades on life satisfaction in children based on representative data in Germany (Blossfeld & Roßbach, 2019)

  • Regarding the effect of children’s school grades, Model 2a predicts that an increase by one grade increases children’s life satisfaction by about 0.24 scale points, which is in line with the second hypothesis

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Summary

Introduction

High levels of mental health problems around the world are one of the most serious challenges in modern societies and about 50% of mental health problems in adulthood can be attributed to childhood and early adolescence (World Health Organization, 2018, 2019). An increasing number of studies investigate early inequalities in children’s life satisfaction and ask for valuable strategies for enhancing their emotional well-being to prevent longstanding inequalities in individual mental health (Gilman & Huebner, 2003). Various strategies for increasing individual life satisfaction are discussed, with early investments in education often seen as the most favorable ones (for review see Powdthavee et al, 2015). Increasing levels of school-related stressors are assumed to interfere with developmental changes and the increasing demands on children’s educational achievement and higher pressure in schools result in lower levels of children’s life satisfaction and a higher number of mental health constraints (Gilman & Huebner, 2003; Hascher et al, 2018)

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