We study the development of social capital through adult civic engagement, in relation to social capital exposure having occurred during childhood based on experiences outside the family at primary school. We assume that the types of classmates in attendance at a child's school would have influenced her/his social capital. To identify the types of classmates, we take advantage of the heterogeneity in the ability levels of British primary-school classes during the 1960s. At that time, some schools were practicing a method of streaming, whereas others were not. Using British National Child Development data, we construct a single score of civic engagement and evaluate the effect on adult civic engagement of attending homogeneous-ability classe...
Although enrolment in primary schools in Peru is very high, more than half of primary school childre...
Encouraging children to become ‘good citizens’ who positively contribute towards society through cha...
This paper considers the role of social capital and trust in the aspirations for higher education of...
We study the development of social capital through adult civic engagement, in relation to social cap...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The project aimed to e...
This dissertation assesses if and how cultural properties that augment social ties, commonly denoted...
There are many explanations offered to understand the differential academic outcomes of students fro...
Scholarly work on student and school performance poses a variety of explanations for observed variat...
From introduction: Because schools operate in such complex environments the effects of various forms...
This article examines the role that social capital plays in school success and in the explanation of...
Emergent ethnographic research disentangles “social capital ” from other components of social class ...
Social capital is generally considered beneficial for students’ school adjustment. This paper argues...
Contains fulltext : 73077.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)To what extent d...
This paper derives from a pilot study. The study explored how family’s forms of social capital owned...
Although enrolment in primary schools in Peru is very high, more than half of primary school childre...
Although enrolment in primary schools in Peru is very high, more than half of primary school childre...
Encouraging children to become ‘good citizens’ who positively contribute towards society through cha...
This paper considers the role of social capital and trust in the aspirations for higher education of...
We study the development of social capital through adult civic engagement, in relation to social cap...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The project aimed to e...
This dissertation assesses if and how cultural properties that augment social ties, commonly denoted...
There are many explanations offered to understand the differential academic outcomes of students fro...
Scholarly work on student and school performance poses a variety of explanations for observed variat...
From introduction: Because schools operate in such complex environments the effects of various forms...
This article examines the role that social capital plays in school success and in the explanation of...
Emergent ethnographic research disentangles “social capital ” from other components of social class ...
Social capital is generally considered beneficial for students’ school adjustment. This paper argues...
Contains fulltext : 73077.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)To what extent d...
This paper derives from a pilot study. The study explored how family’s forms of social capital owned...
Although enrolment in primary schools in Peru is very high, more than half of primary school childre...
Although enrolment in primary schools in Peru is very high, more than half of primary school childre...
Encouraging children to become ‘good citizens’ who positively contribute towards society through cha...
This paper considers the role of social capital and trust in the aspirations for higher education of...