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Title: Parental media socialization and educational attainment: Resource or disadvantage?
Author(s): Notten, N.J.W.R. (298983893)
Kraaykamp, G.L.M. (102045836)
Publication year: 2010
Document type: Article / Letter to editor
Journal: Research in Social Stratification and Mobility
ISSN: 0276-5624
Volume: vol. 28
Issue: iss. 4
Start page: p. 453
End page: p. 464
Related link(s): http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rssm.2010.07.001
Abstract: This article analyzes the long-term effects of parental media socialization on children's educational attainment. Data on 8316 individuals from 3257 families in the Netherlands is used to estimate hierarchical models that distinguish between family-specific (socialization) and individual-level effects. The study reveals that parental reading and television socialization plays a meaningful role in predicting children's success in education. Whereas parental time spent viewing television is disadvantageous for a child's educational career, parental reading intensity enhances educational success. Moreover, not only does media exposure play a relevant role, the content of parental media consumption also matters. Parents who prefer highbrow literature benefit their children's educational career, whereas a preference for watching popular TV programs is disadvantageous for a child's educational success. Next to the parental example of media consumption, media guidance provided by parents is scrutinized. Results indicate that parent-child interactions on reading positively affect children's educational attainment.
Subject: Secularization, fragmentation and stratification
Organization: SW OZ NISCO SOC
Appears in Collections:Academic bibliography

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2066/90782

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