Examining the role of civic attitudes in the link between family wealth and school dropout among tertiary vocational students

Publication date

2023-09-15

Authors

Finkenauer, CatrinORCID 0000-0002-5429-0627ISNI 0000000389226067
Boer, MaartjeISNI 0000000492796607
Spitzer, JennaISNI 0000000507443311
Weinberg, Dominic
Visser, K.ISNI 0000000419505690
Jonker, MerelISNI 0000000361261629
Stevens, G.W.J.M.ORCID 0000-0001-9929-7972ISNI 0000000393585134

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Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

This study examined the relationship between family wealth and school dropout among vocational education students (n = 1,231; mean age=17.81). It investigated whether (1) family affluence and adolescents’ own perceptions and experiences of their family wealth (i.e., perceived family wealth, financial scarcity) predict dropout, (2) adolescents’ civic attitudes (i.e., system justification, institutional trust) explain the association between family wealth and school dropout, and (3) trust in teachers buffers against the risk of dropout among students with lower civic attitudes. Multivariate models revealed that financial scarcity predicted dropout. Financial scarcity showed an indirect only effect on dropout through lower institutional trust, but not through system justification. Trust in teachers was neither associated with dropout, nor a moderator. Controlling for mental health problems did not affect these results. This study helps explain how students’ experienced and perceived family wealth can affect their educational attainment, by reducing their trust in social institutions.

Keywords

Adolescents, Attainment, Beliefs, Gradient, Health, Identity, Income inequality, Low socioeconomic-status, Mobility, Social-class, SDG 4 - Quality Education

Citation

Finkenauer, C, Boer, M, Spitzer, J, Weinberg, D, Visser, K, Jonker, M & Stevens, G W J M 2023, 'Examining the role of civic attitudes in the link between family wealth and school dropout among tertiary vocational students', npj Science of Learning, vol. 8, no. 1, 38, pp. 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41539-023-00189-4