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DOI: 10.3102/00028312043002193 © 2006 American Educational Research Association
Parent Involvement, Cultural Capital, and the Achievement Gap Among Elementary School ChildrenUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
This study examined the level and impact of five types of parent involvement on elementary school childrens academic achievement by race/ethnicity, poverty, and parent educational attainment. The sample comprised 415 third through fifth graders who completed the Elementary School Success Profile. Hypotheses from Bourdieus theory of cultural capital were assessed with t tests, chi-square statistics, and hierarchical regressions. Consistent with the theory, parents with different demographic characteristics exhibited different types of involvement, and the types of involvement exhibited by parents from dominant groups had the strongest association with achievement. However, contrary to theoretical expectations, members of dominant and nondominant groups benefited similarly from certain types of involvement and differently from others. Implications for research and practice are discussed.
Key Words: Bourdieu cultural capital elementary school habitus parent involvement
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