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Parental environment and student achievement: Does a Matthew effect exist?

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Listed:
  • Gaelle Aymeric
  • Emmanuelle Lavaine
  • Brice Magdalou

Abstract

This paper investigates the causal impact of the parental environment on the student's academic performance in mathematics, literature and English (as a foreign language), using a new database covering all children aged 8 to 15 of the Madrid community, from 2016 to 2019. Parental environment refers here to the parents' level of education (i.e. the skills they acquired before bringing up their children), and parental investment (the effort made by parents to bring up their children). We distinguish the persistent effect of the parental environment from the so-called Matthew effect, which describes a possible tendency for the impact of the parental environment to increase as the child grows up. Whatever the subject (mathematics, literature or English), our results are in line with most studies concerning the persistent effect: a favourable parental environment goes hand in hand with better results for the children. As regards the Matthew effect, the results differ between subjects: while the impact of the parental environment tends to diminish from the age of 8 to 15 in mathematics, it forms a bell curve in literature (first increasing, then decreasing) and increases steadily in English. This result, which is encouraging for mathematics and even literature, confirms the social dimension involved in learning a foreign language compared to more academic subjects.

Suggested Citation

  • Gaelle Aymeric & Emmanuelle Lavaine & Brice Magdalou, 2025. "Parental environment and student achievement: Does a Matthew effect exist?," Papers 2510.18481, arXiv.org.
  • Handle: RePEc:arx:papers:2510.18481
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