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Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science | 2012

The educational expectations of children of immigrants in Italy

Alessandra Minello; Nicola Barban

In this article, the authors investigate the short-run educational expectations and long-term educational aspirations of the children of immigrants living in Italy and attending eighth grade. The authors look at educational ambition, both as a predictor of educational choice and as a measure of social integration. They consider both secondary-school track and university goals. Data come from the ITAGEN2 survey (2005–2006). First, the authors analyze the relationship of short-run expectations and long-term aspirations to structural (e.g., migration status and country of origin) and social (e.g., family socioeconomic status and friendship ties) conditions. The latter seem to be determinants of both expectations and aspirations, but long-term educational aspirations are not associated with migration status. Second, the authors investigate the relevance of context in delineating educational attitudes. The authors performed a multilevel analysis including both individual- and school-level variables. Their results show that attending a school where most of the Italian pupils have high educational expectations may lead children of immigrants to enhance their own aspirations.


International Studies in Sociology of Education | 2014

From mother to daughter: changes in intergenerational educational and occupational mobility in Germany

Alessandra Minello; Hans-Peter Blossfeld

Recent decades have seen a dramatic expansion in the educational attainment and occupational opportunities of German women. Both the educational and occupational positions of the mothers and those of their daughters are continuously changing across cohorts. Our study aims to detect the probability of daughters to experience maternal-line intergenerational educational and occupational mobility. Using new data from the National Educational Panel Study of adult cohorts, we analyse successive cohorts of German women born between 1944 and 1984. We demonstrate that the relation between mothers’ and daughters’ educational and occupational career has changed over time. Maternal-line female mobility has decreased over cohorts. Our results also reveal that the relationship between educational careers and female job mobility has changed. The tertiary level of education has become more relevant across cohorts in preventing downward intergenerational mobility and it has become a prerequisite for taking part in the completion for upward intergenerational mobility.


European Societies | 2018

Linking the Macro to the Micro: A Multidimensional Approach to Educational Inequalities in Four European Countries

Erzsébet Bukodi; Ferdinand Eibl; Sandra Buchholz; Sonia Marzadro; Alessandra Minello; Susanne Wahler; Hans-Peter Blossfeld; Robert Erikson; Antonio Schizzerotto

ABSTRACT Recent research into educational inequalities has shown the importance of decomposing social origins into parental class, status and education, representing economic, socio-cultural and educational family resources, respectively. But we know little about how inequalities in educational attainment at the micro-level map onto institutional characteristics of educational systems at the macro-level, if we treat social origins in a multidimensional way. Drawing on the rich over-time variation in educational systems in four European countries – Britain, Sweden, Germany and Italy – this paper develops and tests a number of hypotheses regarding the effects of various components of social origins on individuals’ educational attainment in different institutional contexts. It is evident from our results that a great deal of similarity exists across nations with different educational systems in the persisting importance for individuals’ educational attainment of parental class, status and education. But our findings also indicate that changes in the institutional features of educational systems have, in some instances although not in others, served to reinforce or to offset the social processes generating educational inequalities at the micro level.


British Journal of Sociology of Education | 2017

From parents to children: the impact of mothers’ and fathers’ educational attainments on those of their sons and daughters in West Germany

Alessandra Minello; Hans-Peter Blossfeld

Abstract Empirical studies have repeatedly shown that in Germany educational success still strongly depends on the social origin of individuals. Using the National Educational Panel Study, we analyse the effects of fathers’ and mothers’ education levels on their sons’ and daughters’ educational attainments across three successive birth cohorts in West Germany. We calculate the predicted probabilities of reaching low, medium or high education levels on the basis of the level of education of the mothers and the fathers. Our results show: a persistence of the status maintenance model, with very few exceptions; a growth in the educational level of women via medium-level education connected to segregation in the labour market; and finally that the first transition of girls to medium-level education has been completed, leaving space for daughters to attempt to outnumber sons in tertiary education, mainly due to the pressure of mothers.


International Studies in Sociology of Education | 2014

The educational expectations of Italian children: the role of social interactions with the children of immigrants

Alessandra Minello

This paper aims to investigate to what extent the growing presence of children with immigrant background in the Italian school system has an impact on the educational expectations of Italian students in eighth grade. Educational expectations are individuals’ plans for their future educational career, adjusted to the subjectively estimated probabilities of achieving a given outcome. Multilevel analyses are performed using data from ITAGEN2 (Italian Second Generation) survey, the first nationwide survey on natives, first- and second-generation immigrants. Results demonstrate that attending a school with a high proportion of children of immigrants has no impact on realistic expectations about secondary education. In addition, students attending schools with high level of interethnic integration are more prone to having high educational expectations.


Demographic Research | 2014

Mortality selection in the first three months of life and survival in the following thirty-three months in rural Veneto (North-East Italy) from 1816 to 1835

Leonardo Piccione; Gianpiero Dalla Zuanna; Alessandra Minello


Archive | 2017

Early baptism & early mortality

Alessandra Minello; Gianpiero Dalla Zuanna; Guido Alfani


Archive | 2017

Can adult education compensate for early disadvantages? The role of adult education in reducing inequalities for German men and women: The Role of Compensation and Multiplication in Resource Accumulation

Alessandra Minello; Hans-Peter Blossfeld


Demographic Research | 2017

First signs of transition: The parallel decline of early baptism and early mortality in the province of Padua (northeast Italy), 1816‒1870

Alessandra Minello; Gianpiero Dalla Zuanna; Guido Alfani


Statistica applicata : Italian journal of applied statistics | 2014

Children of immigrants in the Italian school system : what kind of assimilation?

Alessandra Minello; Gianpiero Dalla Zuanna

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Hans-Peter Blossfeld

European University Institute

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