Concerted cultivation in early childhood and social inequalities in cognitive skills: Evidence from a German panel study

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Autoren

  • Karoline Mikus
  • Nicole Tieben
  • Pia S. Schober

Organisationseinheiten

Externe Organisationen

  • Eberhard Karls Universität Tübingen
Forschungs-netzwerk anzeigen

Details

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer100547
FachzeitschriftResearch in Social Stratification and Mobility
Jahrgang72
Frühes Online-Datum1 Sept. 2020
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - Apr. 2021

Abstract

According to Lareau's (2003) concept of concerted cultivation, upper and middle-class parents aim more systematically to promote their children's skills in various ways in comparison with lower class parents. These differences in parenting are assumed to affect children's skill development. Whereas Lareau developed her concept for families with elementary school children, and much of the subsequent literature has focused on this age group or older, we argue that concerted cultivation is likely to be visible already during early childhood. Therefore, we investigated if participation in organized leisure activities and parents' promotion of cognitive stimulation during early childhood---as two indicators of concerted cultivation---explain later differences in cognitive skills. We furthermore examined if concerted cultivation mediates the association between social background and cognitive skills of children. We drew on longitudinal data from 1,632 children in the Starting Cohort 2 of the German National Educational Panel Study (NEPS). We show that parents with high socio-economic status are more likely to enroll their 5-year-old children in organized leisure activities and to read to them daily. Results from lagged dependent variable regressions indicate that only enrollment in music mediates the relationship between parental socio-economic status and children's skill development in math and reasoning. Our study highlights the prevalence of concerted cultivation as a parenting style of the German middle-class already during early childhood. Nevertheless, it only moderately contributes to children's cognitive skill development. Our mediation analysis showed that only music participation explained a modest portion of the background-specific differences in math and reasoning skills.

ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete

Zitieren

Concerted cultivation in early childhood and social inequalities in cognitive skills: Evidence from a German panel study. / Mikus, Karoline; Tieben, Nicole; Schober, Pia S.
in: Research in Social Stratification and Mobility, Jahrgang 72, 100547, 04.2021.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

Download
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title = "Concerted cultivation in early childhood and social inequalities in cognitive skills: Evidence from a German panel study",
abstract = "According to Lareau's (2003) concept of concerted cultivation, upper and middle-class parents aim more systematically to promote their children's skills in various ways in comparison with lower class parents. These differences in parenting are assumed to affect children's skill development. Whereas Lareau developed her concept for families with elementary school children, and much of the subsequent literature has focused on this age group or older, we argue that concerted cultivation is likely to be visible already during early childhood. Therefore, we investigated if participation in organized leisure activities and parents' promotion of cognitive stimulation during early childhood---as two indicators of concerted cultivation---explain later differences in cognitive skills. We furthermore examined if concerted cultivation mediates the association between social background and cognitive skills of children. We drew on longitudinal data from 1,632 children in the Starting Cohort 2 of the German National Educational Panel Study (NEPS). We show that parents with high socio-economic status are more likely to enroll their 5-year-old children in organized leisure activities and to read to them daily. Results from lagged dependent variable regressions indicate that only enrollment in music mediates the relationship between parental socio-economic status and children's skill development in math and reasoning. Our study highlights the prevalence of concerted cultivation as a parenting style of the German middle-class already during early childhood. Nevertheless, it only moderately contributes to children's cognitive skill development. Our mediation analysis showed that only music participation explained a modest portion of the background-specific differences in math and reasoning skills.",
keywords = "Cognitive skills, Concerted cultivation, Early childhood, Organized leisure activities, Parental cognitive stimulation, Social inequality",
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TY - JOUR

T1 - Concerted cultivation in early childhood and social inequalities in cognitive skills

T2 - Evidence from a German panel study

AU - Mikus, Karoline

AU - Tieben, Nicole

AU - Schober, Pia S.

N1 - Funding Information: This paper uses data from the National Educational Panel Study (NEPS): Starting Cohort Kindergarten, doi: https://doi.org/10.5157/NEPS:SC2 : 6.0.1. From 2008 to 2013, NEPS data were collected as part of the Framework Program for the Promotion of Empirical Educational Research funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) . Since 2014, NEPS has been carried out by the Leibniz Institute for Educational Trajectories (LIfBi) at the University of Bamberg in cooperation with a nationwide network.

PY - 2021/4

Y1 - 2021/4

N2 - According to Lareau's (2003) concept of concerted cultivation, upper and middle-class parents aim more systematically to promote their children's skills in various ways in comparison with lower class parents. These differences in parenting are assumed to affect children's skill development. Whereas Lareau developed her concept for families with elementary school children, and much of the subsequent literature has focused on this age group or older, we argue that concerted cultivation is likely to be visible already during early childhood. Therefore, we investigated if participation in organized leisure activities and parents' promotion of cognitive stimulation during early childhood---as two indicators of concerted cultivation---explain later differences in cognitive skills. We furthermore examined if concerted cultivation mediates the association between social background and cognitive skills of children. We drew on longitudinal data from 1,632 children in the Starting Cohort 2 of the German National Educational Panel Study (NEPS). We show that parents with high socio-economic status are more likely to enroll their 5-year-old children in organized leisure activities and to read to them daily. Results from lagged dependent variable regressions indicate that only enrollment in music mediates the relationship between parental socio-economic status and children's skill development in math and reasoning. Our study highlights the prevalence of concerted cultivation as a parenting style of the German middle-class already during early childhood. Nevertheless, it only moderately contributes to children's cognitive skill development. Our mediation analysis showed that only music participation explained a modest portion of the background-specific differences in math and reasoning skills.

AB - According to Lareau's (2003) concept of concerted cultivation, upper and middle-class parents aim more systematically to promote their children's skills in various ways in comparison with lower class parents. These differences in parenting are assumed to affect children's skill development. Whereas Lareau developed her concept for families with elementary school children, and much of the subsequent literature has focused on this age group or older, we argue that concerted cultivation is likely to be visible already during early childhood. Therefore, we investigated if participation in organized leisure activities and parents' promotion of cognitive stimulation during early childhood---as two indicators of concerted cultivation---explain later differences in cognitive skills. We furthermore examined if concerted cultivation mediates the association between social background and cognitive skills of children. We drew on longitudinal data from 1,632 children in the Starting Cohort 2 of the German National Educational Panel Study (NEPS). We show that parents with high socio-economic status are more likely to enroll their 5-year-old children in organized leisure activities and to read to them daily. Results from lagged dependent variable regressions indicate that only enrollment in music mediates the relationship between parental socio-economic status and children's skill development in math and reasoning. Our study highlights the prevalence of concerted cultivation as a parenting style of the German middle-class already during early childhood. Nevertheless, it only moderately contributes to children's cognitive skill development. Our mediation analysis showed that only music participation explained a modest portion of the background-specific differences in math and reasoning skills.

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KW - Concerted cultivation

KW - Early childhood

KW - Organized leisure activities

KW - Parental cognitive stimulation

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DO - 10.1016/j.rssm.2020.100547

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JO - Research in Social Stratification and Mobility

JF - Research in Social Stratification and Mobility

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