Literature DB >> 24882915

Introduction to symposium on unmeasured heterogeneity in school transition models.

Robert D Mare1.   

Abstract

Researchers have used models of school transitions for over 30 years to describe inequality of educational opportunity and have contributed a number of important refinements and extensions. School transition models have the complication that the estimated effects of family background on the probability of continuing in school are affected by differential attrition on unobserved factors at earlier stages of schooling. The articles in this symposium present a variety of useful approaches to unobserved heterogeneity in school transition models. Investigators who use these approaches should attend to several issues: (1) models for school transitions may be used both descriptively (and are not therefore subject to any well-defined "bias") and as tools for causal inference. (2) The concept of bias presupposes an underlying experiment, structural model, or population model that would, in principle, define the corresponding unbiased parameters - yet these underlying models are difficult to specify for school transition models. (3) Unobserved determinants of whether individuals make school transitions may be both exogenous and endogenous with respect to the observed regressors in the model. Without a model of how unobserved heterogeneity arises, attempted "corrections" for unmeasured heterogeneity may yield misleading estimates of the effects of measured determinants of school continuation.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Educational stratification; School transition models; Unobserved heterogeneity

Year:  2011        PMID: 24882915      PMCID: PMC4035907          DOI: 10.1016/j.rssm.2011.05.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Res Soc Stratif Mobil        ISSN: 0276-5624


  4 in total

1.  Heterogeneity's ruses: some surprising effects of selection on population dynamics.

Authors:  J W Vaupel; A I Yashin
Journal:  Am Stat       Date:  1985-08       Impact factor: 8.710

2.  Social background composition and educational growth.

Authors:  R D Mare
Journal:  Demography       Date:  1979-02

3.  VALUES AND LIMITATIONS OF STATISTICAL MODELS.

Authors:  Yu Xie
Journal:  Res Soc Stratif Mobil       Date:  2011-09-01

4.  Education and social background.

Authors:  B Duncan
Journal:  AJS       Date:  1967-01
  4 in total

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