1. Declining inequality? The changing impact of socio-economic background and ability on education in Australia.
- Author
-
Marks, Gary N. and McMillan, Julie
- Subjects
EDUCATION ,EQUALITY ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,ACADEMIC achievement ,SOCIOLOGY - Abstract
The paper addresses several debates surrounding the reproduction of socio-economic inequality: (i) the persistent inequality thesis, which maintains that despite the increases in educational participation socio-economic inequalities in education have not declined; (ii) the related thesis of maximally maintained inequality, which proposes that socio-economic inequalities decline only when participation levels for the most privileged socio-economic group approach saturation levels; (iii) the meritocracy debate on the importance of ability vis-à-vis socio-economic background and changes in its influence over time; and (iv) the effect of policy changes on socio-economic inequalities in education. These issues are addressed using data from six Australian youth cohorts born between 1961 and the mid-1980s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2003
- Full Text
- View/download PDF