Inequalities in the education system and the reproduction of socioeconomic disparities in voting in England, Denmark and Germany: the influence of country context, tracking and self-efficacy on voting intentions of students age 16-18
Inequalities in the education system and the reproduction of socioeconomic disparities in voting in England, Denmark and Germany: the influence of country context, tracking and self-efficacy on voting intentions of students age 16-18
This article performs exploratory research using a mixed-methods approach (structural equation modelling and a thematic analysis of interview data) to analyse the ways in which socioeconomic disparities in voting patterns are reproduced through inequalities in education in different national contexts, and the role of self-efficacy in this process. The evidence suggests that in Germany and England students with lower socioeconomic status (SES) have lower levels of general self-efficacy, and that this is reinforced through early experiences of inequalities in the education system, such as within- or between-school selection. Low levels of general self-efficacy are then found to reduce political self-efficacy and voting intentions. In Germany and England, it is these students who enter initial vocational education and training (IVET). The experience of IVET then reinforces the distinctions in civic engagement, probably either through peer socialisation and/or curriculum differences. In Denmark, where SES has a weaker association with track placement, the experience of being placed in IVET plays a stronger role in reducing political self-efficacy and voting intentions.
IVET, tracking, social class, self-efficacy, political participation, voting, equality, inequality, education system
Hoskins, Bryony
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Janmaat, Gerrit
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Han, Christine
095b46fd-4cb7-4e38-97bc-1af8ddb22478
Muijs, Daniel
62af2eff-0cb5-403b-81cc-7a3bfb3e640e
October 2014
Hoskins, Bryony
ad912282-26d8-4ad0-bd61-f306bee35e53
Janmaat, Gerrit
8a7b1363-5659-4e9c-b040-a46e67ab6784
Han, Christine
095b46fd-4cb7-4e38-97bc-1af8ddb22478
Muijs, Daniel
62af2eff-0cb5-403b-81cc-7a3bfb3e640e
Hoskins, Bryony, Janmaat, Gerrit, Han, Christine and Muijs, Daniel
(2014)
Inequalities in the education system and the reproduction of socioeconomic disparities in voting in England, Denmark and Germany: the influence of country context, tracking and self-efficacy on voting intentions of students age 16-18.
Compare: A Journal of Comparative Education, 44 (5).
(doi:10.1080/03057925.2014.912796).
Abstract
This article performs exploratory research using a mixed-methods approach (structural equation modelling and a thematic analysis of interview data) to analyse the ways in which socioeconomic disparities in voting patterns are reproduced through inequalities in education in different national contexts, and the role of self-efficacy in this process. The evidence suggests that in Germany and England students with lower socioeconomic status (SES) have lower levels of general self-efficacy, and that this is reinforced through early experiences of inequalities in the education system, such as within- or between-school selection. Low levels of general self-efficacy are then found to reduce political self-efficacy and voting intentions. In Germany and England, it is these students who enter initial vocational education and training (IVET). The experience of IVET then reinforces the distinctions in civic engagement, probably either through peer socialisation and/or curriculum differences. In Denmark, where SES has a weaker association with track placement, the experience of being placed in IVET plays a stronger role in reducing political self-efficacy and voting intentions.
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hoskins et al.pdf
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e-pub ahead of print date: 20 May 2014
Published date: October 2014
Keywords:
IVET, tracking, social class, self-efficacy, political participation, voting, equality, inequality, education system
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 378006
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378006
ISSN: 0305-7925
PURE UUID: c294067d-3afa-4fd1-9e8b-dfb37200d0a3
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Date deposited: 23 Jun 2015 14:26
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 20:14
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Author:
Bryony Hoskins
Author:
Gerrit Janmaat
Author:
Christine Han
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