EqualSoc
Close this window


Primary and Secondary Effects in Class Differentials: The Transition to Tertiary Education in Germany


In this article we investigate social inequality at the transition to tertiary education in Germany by drawing on Boudon’s well-known distinction between primary and secondary effects of social class origin. Primary effects describe class differentials that are related to academic performance, secondary effects comprise class differentials in educational choices, given the same performance levels. In order to generate estimates on the relative importance of primary and secondary effects in the creation of class differentials in tertiary choices and their development over time, we apply a procedure which has recently been developed by Jackson et al. (2007). For our analyses we rely on a series of datasets from the German Higher Education Information Systems Institute (HIS) on students who have gained eligibility for tertiary education in 1983, 1990, 1994 and 1999. Our results show that class differentials in the transition to higher education in Germany are mainly due to secondary effects. While the relative importance of primary vs. secondary effects does not change over time, overall class effects seem to be generally more pronounced for women. In the second part of the analyses we relate the secondary effects to explanatory factors, such as motivational differences or cost-benefit expectations in order to gain more insight into the underlying mechanisms.

Reference:

Jackson, M., Erikson, R., Goldthorpe, J. H. and Yaish, M. (2007) ‘Primary and Secondary Effects in Class Differentials in Educational Attainment: The Transition to A-Level Courses in England and Wales’, Acta Sociologica 50(3): 211-229.


Schindler, S., Reimer, D.