How Do Second-Generation Immigrant Students Access Higher Education?
Contributor(s)
Institut de recherche sur l'éducation : Sociologie et Economie de l'Education (IREDU) ; Université de Bourgogne (UB)Centre d'études et de recherches sur les qualifications (CEREQ) ; ministère de l'Emploi, cohésion sociale et logement - Ministère de l'Éducation nationale, de l’Enseignement supérieur et de la Recherche (M.E.N.E.S.R.)
TREE-Institut for Sociology ; Université de Bâle
Keywords
Second-generationaccess
higher education
pathways
international comparison
[SHS.EDU] Humanities and Social Sciences/Education
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https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01343091Abstract
International audienceWe analyse the access to different institutional pathways to higher education for second-generation students, focusing on youths that hold a higher-education entrance certificate. The alternative vocational pathway appears to compensate to some degree, compared to the traditional academic one, for North-African and Southern-European youths in France, those from Turkey in Germany, and to a lesser degree those from Portugal, Turkey, Ex-Yugoslavia, Albania/Kosovo in Switzerland. This is not the case in Switzerland for Western-European, Italian, and Spanish youths who indeed access higher education via the academic pathway more often than Swiss youths. Using youth panel and survey data, multinomial models are applied to analyse these pathway choices.
Date
2016-07Type
info:eu-repo/semantics/articleIdentifier
oai:HAL:halshs-01343091v1halshs-01343091
https://halshs.archives-ouvertes.fr/halshs-01343091