Sr. Lucas, Effectively maintained inequality: Education transitions, track mobility, and social background effects, AM J SOCIOL, 106(6), 2001, pp. 1642-1690
This article proposes a general explanation for social background-related i
nequality. Educational attainment research indicates that the later an educ
ation transition, the lower the social background effect. While some sugges
t life course changes in the parent-child relationship or between-family co
mpetition explain this pattern, others contend the result is a statistical
artifact, and that the analytic strategy presupposes agents are irrationall
y myopic. This article addresses these criticisms by framing educational tr
ansitions in terms of students' movement through the stratified curriculum.
Students select their stratum, one of which is dropping out. To make these
choices, they consider their most recent salient performance. Using time-v
arying performance measures to predict students' track placement/school con
tinuation sustains the validity of the educational transitions approach and
suggests substantively important social background effects even for nearly
universal transitions. Results are consistent with the general perspective
termed effectively maintained inequality.