Accounting for British Muslim's educational attainment: gender differences and the impact of expectations

This study compares the educational attainment of Muslim and Christian White-British boys and girls at the following junctions: Key Stage 2, Key Stage 3, GCSE, getting into universities and achieving a place at a Russell Group university. The study utilises the Longitudinal Study of Young People in...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of sociology of education 2018-02, Vol.39 (2), p.242-259
Hauptverfasser: Khattab, Nabil, Modood, Tariq
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container_title British journal of sociology of education
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creator Khattab, Nabil
Modood, Tariq
description This study compares the educational attainment of Muslim and Christian White-British boys and girls at the following junctions: Key Stage 2, Key Stage 3, GCSE, getting into universities and achieving a place at a Russell Group university. The study utilises the Longitudinal Study of Young People in England waves 1-6 with linked data from the National Pupil Database. The analysis shows that once we take previous school performance into account, Muslim students seem to be performing as well as the majority group, even in attending Russell group universities. Muslim girls seem to now be outperforming Muslim boys, especially in relation to their school performance. Furthermore, parental expectations and students' own expectations play an important role in determining the attainment of students. The study concludes that the higher achievement of young Muslims may be strongly correlated with their own unusually high expectations of going to university; but a primary source of the latter is likely to be the parents' unusually high expectations, the messages they receive and the discipline in place in relation to schoolwork at home and their relationship with their parents and their parents' norms.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Academic Achievement
British Muslims
Children
Christian Islamic relations
Christianity
College Students
Colleges & universities
Comparative Analysis
Educational Attainment
Educational expectations
Educational sociology
Expectation
Foreign Countries
gender
Gender Differences
Higher education
Islam
Islamic Culture
Longitudinal Studies
Majority groups
Multivariate Analysis
Muslims
Parent Student Relationship
Parents & parenting
school performance
Students
Universities
White Students
Youth
title Accounting for British Muslim's educational attainment: gender differences and the impact of expectations
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