Abstract:
Today's children are fundamental to society because they are our future; they hold the key to
change, and in turn a successful future, in their hands. Therefore, it is society's duty to
provide them with a complete education that teaches them how to work together
successfully, how to question what is in front of them, and how to be catalysts of change.
This education starts with what children learn ~on:;t their parents and from what they learn in
the first few years of their lives. This initial education impacts the rest of their lives, and
inherently society's future. In his research, William Teale concludes that "Horne background
plays a significant role in a young child's orientation to literacy and to education. But home
background is a complex of economic, sccial.cultural, and even personal factors." (Teale
1993) According to most research done on th~ parental involvement in their children's
education, the most influential of these four interconnected elements described by Teale are
the personal backgrounds and the economic backgrounds of parents. These two components
also largely contribute to the home environment .th.at they provide for their children.
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Parental education and occupational status are highly correlated with children's educational . ..
choices and attainment. Dustmann (2004) finds that parental background is strongly related
to the choice of secondary school track of the child, and that this association translates into
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substantial differences in earnings later in life. This is surprising given that, on the surface,
the German school system appears fairly egalitarian, and that returns to education are at
conventional levels. However, it has been suggested that the importance of parental
background for a child's education is due to more specific characteristics of the school
system, such as stratification and early tracking of students according to ability (OECD,
2008).
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Traditionally, family status variables such as socio-economic status and parents' level of
education have been regarded as predictors of children's academic achievement.
Increasingly, research has suggested that, rather than having a direct association with
children's academic achievement, socio-economic status and parents' level of education is
part of a larger constellation of psychological and sociological variables influencing
children's school outcomes (Joan, 2009). Attendant on higher levels of education may be
access to resources, such as income, time, energy, and community contacts, that allow for
greater parental involvement in a child's education. Thus, the influence of socio-economic
status and parents level of education on student outcomes might best be represented as a
relationship mediated by interactions among status and process variables (Joan, 2009).The
literature also suggests that level of education influences parents knowledge, beliefs, values,
and goals about childrearing, so that a variety of parental behaviours are indirectly related to
children's school performance. For example, higher socio economic status and high levels of
education may enhance parents' facility at becoming involved in their children's education,
and also enable parents to acquire and model .social skills and problem-solving strategies
conducive to children's school success. Thus, students whose parents have higher socio economic status and higher levels of education may have an enhanced regard for learning,
more positive ability beliefs, a stronger work orientation, and they may use more effective
learning strategies than children of parents with lower socio-economic status and lower
levels of education (Joan, 2009).
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Onocha (1985) concludes that a child from 'a well-educated family with high socio economic status is more likely to perform better. than a child from an illiterate family. This is
because the child from an educated family has a lot of support such as a decent and good
environment for academic work, parental S~PP9rt and guidance, enough textual and
academic materials and decent feeding. He or she is likely to be sent to good schools where
well-seasoned teachers will handle his or her subjects. Children's academic achievement
was found to be affected by varying family processes. Campbell and Wu (1994) said that the
home environment and family processes pr9v~de a network of physical, social and
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intellectual forces and factors, which affect the student's learning. According to them, the
family's level of encouragement, expectations, and education activities in the home are
related to socio-economic status, while Song and Hattie (2004) agreed that families from
different socio-economic groups create different learning environments that affect the
child's academic achievement. There is no doubt that parent's attitudes help to condition
their children's attitudes. A parent who shows complete regard for education might have
some effect upon his or her children's education progress. Many studies have examined the
relationships among those constructs and student's achievement. Schunk, Pintrich and
Meece (2008) affirm the fact that there is a consistent fmding of motivation being related to
achievement behaviours. In a nutshell the influence of socio-economic and educational
background of the parents on their children education cannot be undermined.