Title: Measuring the opportunity divide: schools and educational inequality
1Measuring the opportunity divide schools and
educational inequality
- Albert Motivans
- Yanhong Zhang
- UNESCO Institute for Statistics
IIEP Strategic seminar 22
October 2008
2Overview
- Contexts and concepts
- Inequalities in enabling inputs for education
- Inequalities in outcomes
- Social gradients
- Between and within school differences
- Inequalities in teaching and learning processes
- How do the inequalities in the organisation of
learning in schools and classrooms provide a
context for other types of inequalities?
3Educational inequality an issue returning to the
global policy agenda?
- Rights-based approaches
- UN declaration on human rights (1948) regardless
of wealth, ethnicity, sex or religion have the
same rights guaranteed by law - CRC (1989), EFA (1990) quality education is a
basic human right for all - Economic-based arguments
- education is key to reducing poverty and carries
significant benefits for individuals, societies
and economies. Income inequality hinders
sustainable economic growth and social cohesion.
4The literature on inequality in society and
education
- Relationship between education inequalities and
social stratification - Bourdieu, Passeron et al education is a social
institution which replicates existing power
structures it imposes social inequalities - persistent inequalities (Shavits and Blossfeld)
- The role of families
- Influential early comparative work (eg James
Coleman et al) in the 1960s emphasised the
importance of childrens family backgrounds to
later learning outcomes, a dominant theme - Schools matter more in developing contexts
- Work of Heyneman and Loxley, Baker and others
suggest that schools matter more in low-income
societies
5Defining concepts
- Horizontal equity (equality)
- All children should receive equal treatment
- Vertical equity (equity)
- Unequal children should receive unequal treatment
- Equal educational opportunity
- like vertical equity, but focused on relationship
between treatment and targets of equity
Berne and Steifel, 1984 in Sherman and Poirier,
2007
6Horizontal equity
- Equal treatment of those who are equally
situated. A horizontally equitable education
system would treat students who are alike equally
and ensure that they experience similar levels of
educational resources and achieve similar
results. - Horizontal equity requires little or no variation
in the dispersion of access, resources and
outcomes across students.
7Vertical equity
- Vertical equity recognises that students are not
all the same and that their starting points
relative to other students should be considered. - An education system is made fairer because unique
resources (e.g. specialised support staff or
after-school programmes) are provided to achieve
similar results (e.g. school completion) for a
particular group of children or in a specific
region.
8Equal educational opportunity
- All children should have an equal chance to
succeed, with this success based on personal
characteristics such as motivation and effort
(Berne and Stiefel, 1999). - Equal educational opportunity should result in no
difference in educational success based on
student characteristics or place of residence. - For there to be equal opportunity, students
should have access to resources that put them at
a fair starting line and conditions should be
set up to allow the possibility for all to
succeed (ibid).
9Targets and objects of equity
- Targets of equity
- Socioeconomic status (SES)
- Gender
- Race/ethnicity
- Disability statusand many others
- Objects of equity
- Context
- Learner characteristics
- Enabling inputs
- Outcomes
10Framework for education quality
Source EFA GMR, 2005
11Learner-centred framework for education quality
12Inequalities in enabling inputs
- Guiding questions
- Is there little or no variation in the dispersion
of indicators of resources across regions? - Do wealthier regions tend to have better access
or greater resources than poorer ones? - Do regions that are more urban tend to have
better access or greater resources than more
rural regions?
13Educational equity and public policy comparing
results from 16 countries
- Mainly federal states
- Brazil, China, Pakistan, South Africa, USA and
others - Horizontal equity and EEO
- Targets of equity
- - States/districts and their characteristics
- Objects of equity
- Access (participation rates)
- Resources (pupil-teacher ratios, per pupil
expenditure)
Source Sherman and Poirier, 2007
14Types of summary measures
- Horizontal equity
- Range ratio
- Coefficient of variation
- Adjusted McLoone index
- Gini coefficient
- Equal educational opportunity
- Correlation coefficient
- Slope
- Elasticity
15Results primary pupil teacher ratios
16Inequalities in outcomes
- Guiding questions
- To what extent do countries vary in performance?
- Is there a relationship between outcomes and SES?
- To what extent do schools vary in their outcomes?
- Is variation in performance related to
differences between schools or within schools? - See Willms 2006 for further research questions
17 Learning divides
ten policy questions about the peformance and
equity of schools
- Countries participating in international
assessments - PISA, PIRLS, SACMEQ
- Horizontal equity and EEO
- Targets of equity
- - 4th or 8th grade students and their household
SES - Objects of equity
- Reading achievement
- Math achievement
Source Willms, 2004
18 Family background and learning achievement
Source Ross, 2004 and Zhang, 2008
19What types of policy options help to improve
learning outcomes?
-- Universal -- Inclusive
-- Performance or SES-targeted -- Compensatory
policies
Source Willms, 2004
20Between and within-school differences
Performance-targeted, socio-economically
targeted, compensatory, inclusive
Universal, compensatory policies
Source Zhang, 2008
21Inequalities in enabling inputs teaching and
learning
- Countries participating in WEI SPS
- Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Paraguay, Peru,
Uruguay, India (4 states), Malaysia, Philippines,
Sri Lanka, Tunisia - Horizontal equity and EEO
- Targets of equity
- - 4th grade students and their household
characteristics - Objects of equity
- Classroom resources
- Teachers professional satisfaction
- Perceived pupil motivation and behaviours
- Teaching practices
22 WEI Survey of Primary Schools
- World Education Indicators project jointly with
OECD, Statistics Canada and other experts (e.g.,
Postlethwaite, Grisay) - Sampling/translation quality standards
- Minimum of 400 schools and 1000 in Argentina and
India, sample sizes of teachers ranged from 725
(Uruguay) to 3250 (Malaysia)
23Who were survey respondents?
- 7,600 School heads (principals)
- 16,800 Grade 4 teachers for reading and/or
mathematics - National curriculum experts
- Intended to provide full coverage of all
eligible schools, i.e., schools with grade 4
students, in a national education system
24Types of indices constructed using school survey
data
- SCHOOL HEADS
- Pupils school engagement
- Pupils positive behaviour
- Teacher behavioural problems
- School heads instructional leadership
- School heads administrative support
- Social advantage of school intake
- Years of education of school staff
- School autonomy
- On teacher hiring and compensation
- On school budget
- On instructional content
- TEACHERS
- Social advantage classroom intake
- Teacher complaints
- Emphasis on academic achievement
- Professional satisfaction
- Perceived pupil motivation
- Perceived teacher status
- Staffs vision of school objectives
- Learning styles
- Active learning
- Group work
- Rote repetition
- Teaching practices
- Teacher-centred
- Strongly structured
- Pupil-centred
- Opportunity to learn
25Main findings
- Long way to go to equip all schools with decent
quality and equal levels of resources - Discrepancies between national standards and
implementation - School climate and classroom instruction varyied
by socio-economic status of pupils and school type
26Defining index of school intake
- School heads reported
- Support for school attendance
- Parental education
- Relative income
- Teachers reported
- Support of school attendance
- Had eaten meal before coming to school
- Home literacy environment
- Child work and household tasks
- Social probelms
27Some countries still do not have sufficient basic
resources
Pct of pupils in schools that were reported to
have resource items
Source UIS, 2008
28Relationship between school resource items and
pupil intake
Correlation between school resources and Social
advantage of school intake
Source UIS, 2008
29Challenges for implementing targeting
policiesSelf-reported professional
satisfaction by teachers was higher in more
advantaged schools
Correlation coefficients between index of
Teacher-perceived professional satisfaction and
selected classroom characteristics
Correlations significant at p.0.5 appear in bold.
Source UIS, 2008
30 and level of perceived motivation higher in
more advantaged classroom
Correlation coefficients between index of
Teacher-perceived pupil motivation and selected
classroom characteristics
Correlations significant at p.0.5 appear in bold.
Source UIS, 2008
31 and perceived teacher behavioral problems more
serious in schools serving more
disadvantaged pupils
Correlation coefficients between index of
Principal-perceived teacher behavioral problems
and index of Social advantage of school intake
Correlations significant at p.0.5 appear in bold.
Source UIS, 2008
32 and pupil-centred teaching practices more
common in more advantaged classes
Correlation coefficients between index of
Pupil-centred teaching practices and selected
classroom characteristics
Correlations significant at p.0.5 appear in bold.
Source UIS, 2008
33Conclusions drawing together the evidence
- Worthwhile to replicate these approaches
provide useful perspectives on different aspects
of inequality - Interlink these different approaches analytical
strength increases - Need a better understanding of how context
matters for policy interventions disadvantaged
classrooms changes the way teachers teach and
organise their classrooms and how they look at
their pupils - Study practices in schools that are positive
deviants low SES schools that deliver good
results through observation and qualitative
approaches