Gender Differences in Educational Outcomes among the Children of Canadian Immigrants

Title{Gender Differences in Educational Outcomes among the Children of Canadian Immigrants}
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2009
AuthorsAbada, T., & Tenkorang, E.Y.
JournalInternational Sociology
Volume24
Issue4
Pagination580 - 608
KeywordsCanada education ethnicity immigrants mobility race second generation
Abstract

This article examines the gender differences in university education attainment among the children of Canadian immigrants, observing the extent to which parental human capital and social capital in the family and immigrant community may be more important and/or different for men and women. This allows us to examine the degree to which structural and cultural factors used to explain racial differences in academic achievement are also viable explanations along gender lines. Distinct patterns of upward mobility or possibilities for blocked mobility are segmented not only by race and ethnicity but also along gender lines. This study finds the importance of parental human capital whereby maternal education matters more for girls while father's education was more prominent for son's education. Family structure and feelings of exclusion during childhood have a more important role for women while identification with an ethnic ancestry for men is crucial for their pursuit of higher education.

URLhttp://iss.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/24/4/580
Contract Number

0999

Document URL

http://iss.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/24/4/580 http://iss.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/24/4/580

DatasetEDS (Ethnic Diversity Survey)
Network Reference TypeRefereed Article
Research Data Centre (RDC)UWORDC (London)