Do students' language backgrounds explain achievement differences in the Luxembourgish education system?

What is the role of students' language background in school success within the multilingual and highly stratified education system in Luxembourg? Considering achievement differences in terms of the primary effects of social and ethnic origin, we assume that students of a disadvantaged social origin (e.g. working class), with an immigrant background, who speak languages at home other than Luxembourg's official languages show lower school achievements and are placed into lower school tracks. Analyses are based on the data of Luxembourgish primary (grades 4/5) and secondary students (grades 7/8)... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Simoes Loureiro, Kevin
Hadjar, Andreas
Scharf, Jan
Grecu, Alyssa
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2019
Reihe/Periodikum: Ethnicities 19 (2019) 6, S. 1202-1228
Verlag/Hrsg.: Sage
Schlagwörter: Mehrsprachigkeit / Fremdsprachenunterricht / Mathematikunterricht / Schulnoten / Schuljahr 05 / Schuljahr 08 / Panel / Längsschnittuntersuchung / Luxemburg / Sprachkompetenz / Schüler / Wirkung / Schülerleistung / Soziale Herkunft / Migrationshintergrund / Soziale Ungleichheit / Bildungssystem / Bourdieu / Pierre / Grundschule / Übergang / Sekundarbereich / Gegliedertes Schulsystem / Bildungsgang / Schulform / Schülerauslese / Curriculum / Multilingualism / Foreign language teaching / Teaching of foreign languages / Mathematics lessons / Teaching of mathematics / School year 05 / School year 08 / Longitudinal analysis / Longitudinal study / Language skill / Linguistic Competence / Pupil / Pupils / Pupil achievement / Student achievement / Social origin / Immigrant background / Migration background / Social inequality / Education system / Education systems / Elementary School / Primary school
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26746883
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
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Link(s) : https://doi.org/10.25656/01:19324

What is the role of students' language background in school success within the multilingual and highly stratified education system in Luxembourg? Considering achievement differences in terms of the primary effects of social and ethnic origin, we assume that students of a disadvantaged social origin (e.g. working class), with an immigrant background, who speak languages at home other than Luxembourg's official languages show lower school achievements and are placed into lower school tracks. Analyses are based on the data of Luxembourgish primary (grades 4/5) and secondary students (grades 7/8) from two consecutive survey waves in 2016/2017 (for the international project SASAL - School Alienation in Switzerland and Luxembourg). The results indicate language background has only marginal effects, but social and immigrant origin has stronger effects. (DIPF/Orig.)