Academic Outcomes of Public and Private High School Students: What Lies Behind The Differences?
Academic Outcomes of Public and Private High School Students: What Lies Behind The Differences?
Academic Outcomes of Public and Private High School Students: What Lies Behind The Differences?
Abstract
Executive summary
1 Introduction
2 Literature review
3 Data and methodology
4 The characteristics of public and private high schools and their students
5 Results
6 Conclusion
Text begins
Abstract
This study examines the roles played by student characteristics, school resources and
practices, peer effects, and province fixed effects in accounting for differences in the
academic outcomes of private and public high school students. Private high school
students score significantly higher than public high school students on reading,
mathematics, and science assessments at age 15, and have higher levels of
educational attainment by age 23. Two factors consistently account for these
differences. Students who attended private high schools were more likely to have socio-
economic characteristics positively associated with academic success and to have
school peers with university-educated parents. Province of school attendance
accounted for a substantial portion of the differences in academic outcomes measured
in high school (i.e., test scores and high school graduation rates), but generally not at
the postsecondary level. School resources and practices accounted for little of the
differences in academic outcomes.
Executive summary
There is considerable interest in the differences in academic outcomes of children who
attend private and public schools, and the factors underlying these differences. For
instance, if the academic outcomes of private high school students exceed those of
public high school students, is this because of differences in student characteristics or in
school resources and practices?
Many studies that have attempted to answer this question have used data sets
containing detailed information on students, but virtually no information on schools.
Consequently, these studies have accounted for student characteristics and interpreted
the residual differences in academic outcomes as the effect of private schools.
This study advances the literature by using a dataset that contains information not only
on students and their parents (including aspects of their home life), but also on school
resources and practices, and province of school attendance. Furthermore, information
about the students’ peers is available. This level of detail facilitates the examination of
the roles played by student characteristics, school resources and practices, peer
effects, and province fixed effects in accounting for differences in the academic
outcomes of private and public high school students.
Data from the Youth in Transition Survey, Cohort A (YITS-A) and the Programme for
International Student Assessment (PISA) are used to follow students from age 15 to 23.
Several academic outcomes are assessed, including test scores in reading,
mathematics, and science at age 15; and at age 23, high school graduation,
postsecondary attendance and graduation, university attendance and graduation, and
participation in graduate or professional studies.
Private high school students score significantly higher than public high school students
on reading, mathematics, and science assessments at age 15, and have higher levels
of educational attainment by age 23. Two factors consistently account for these
differences. Students who attended private high schools were more likely to have socio-
economic characteristics positively associated with academic success and to have
school peers with university-educated parents. Province of school attendance
accounted for a substantial portion of the differences in academic outcomes measured
in high school (i.e., test scores and high school graduation rates), but generally not at
the postsecondary level. School resources and practices accounted for little of the
differences in academic outcomes.
1 Introduction
In Canada and the United States, about 6% of 15-year-olds attend a private school,
defined as a school under the control of a private entity.Note 1 Governments may
subsidize some of the costs, but in general, parents must pay more to send their
children to a private school.
There is considerable interest in the differences in academic outcomes of children who
attend private and public schools, and particularly in the factors underlying these
differences. For instance, if academic outcomes are indeed better among students from
private schools, to what extent is this attributable to the characteristics of students and
their families or to schools themselves?
Many studies have attempted to answer this question, and these are described in detail
in the literature review. For the most part, researchers have used data sets containing
fairly comprehensive information on students, but little information about schools.
Consequently, these studies have typically accounted for student characteristics and
interpreted any remaining differences in educational outcomes as the result of school
characteristics.
The current study advances the literature by using a dataset that contains information
not only about students and their parents (including aspects of their home life), but also
about school resources and practices. Furthermore, information about the students’
peers is available. This level of detail allows for a more comprehensive assessment of
the roles of student and school characteristics in explaining differences in the academic
outcomes of private and public high school students.
Private high school students scored significantly higher than public high school students
on reading, mathematics, and science assessments at age 15, and by age 23, had
higher levels of educational attainment. Two factors consistently accounted for the
differences in academic outcomes between public and private sector students: socio-
economic characteristics and peers. Students who attended private high schools were
more likely to have socio-economic characteristics positively associated with academic
success and to have school peers with university-educated parents. Private schools
were concentrated in certain provinces (and thus, must follow the provincial curriculum
in order to grant provincially recognized high school diplomas), but had resources and
practices similar to those of public schools. The province of school attendance
accounted for a substantial portion of the differences in academic outcomes measured
in high school (test scores and high school graduation rates), but generally, not at the
postsecondary level. School resources and practices played little to no role in
accounting for the differences in academic outcomes.
This study is organized as follows. Section 2 reviews the literature. The data and
research approach are discussed in Section 3. Section 4 describes private schools in
Canada. Results are presented in Section 5. Finally, the conclusion summarizes the
study and suggests potential follow-up research.
2 Literature review
Comparisons of student outcomes for private and public schools are common in the
economics of education literature. Hanushek (2002) notes that the two fundamental
analytical questions in the literature are: 1. Does performance in private schools exceed
that in public schools, all else being equal?, and 2. If private school performance
exceeds that in public schools, is it because of better schools or better students?
Both questions are challenging. Uncovering the causal relationship between school type
and student outcomes is complicated by the possibility of self-selection into private
schools. Given the costs of private schools, wealthier families may be better able to
enroll their children. Furthermore, private schools may have more stringent academic
admission criteria. Another limiting factor is a general lack of data, particularly about the
school themselves.
Early U.S. studies were largely descriptive, and the data generally lacked a
comprehensive set of covariates, notably, information pertaining to schools.
Researchers accounted for differences in the students who attended private and public
schools, and residual differences in outcomes were, by default, ascribed to differences
in school quality.
Based on data from the High School and Beyond, 1980 survey in the United States,
Coleman, Hoffer and Kilgore (1982)Note 2 used ordinary least squares (OLS) estimation
to assess the impact of Catholic schooling (which is privately provided in the United
States)Note 3 on cognitive achievement, and found a positive association. Their model
accounted for several socio-economic characteristics: household composition, maternal
work patterns before and when the child was in elementary school, ethnicity, number of
siblings, frequency of talking with mother or father about personal experiences, parental
thoughts on child attending college, family income, maternal and paternal education,
number of rooms in the home, presence of an encyclopedia in the home, number of
books in the home, typewriter in home, and child ownership of a pocket calculator. Noell
(1982) argued that the results in Coleman, Hoffer and Kilgore (1982) were not robust to
additional variables, namely, sex, handicap status, region of residence, and early
college attendance expectations. Noell found that after adding these variables, the
impact of private Catholic school attendance on senior and sophomore cognitive
outcomes was generally not statistically significant.
More recently, Grogger and Neal (2000) used the National Education Longitudinal
Study of 1988 (NELS:88) to analyze high school and postsecondary academic
outcomes in relation to student characteristics and achievement at the end of
elementary school. They found associations between private Catholic high school
attendance and high school graduation rates and college attendance among urban
minorities. Horowitz and Spector (2005) examined the impact of private versus public
high schools on the academic performance of 15,270 undergraduates registered at Ball
State University. They found a slightly higher grade point average among students who
went to a religious private high school, compared with their private and public school
counterparts. However, the relationship weakened as students proceeded through
college, and disappeared entirely by junior or senior year.
In addressing the issue of selective school choice, Evans and Schwab (1995) and Neal
(1997) explore the use of instrumental variables in a bivariate probit model setting.
Evans and Schwab (1995) use affiliation with the Catholic church as their instrument
and found a strong positive effect of private Catholic school attendance on high school
graduation and on the probability of starting college, based on data from the High
School and Beyond, 1980 survey. However, they acknowledged that being Catholic
could also be correlated with neighbourhood and family characteristics that could impact
school effectiveness. Neal (1997) observed that another problem in using Catholic
affiliation is that religious identification might also be affected by the type of school the
student attended. Based on data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth of
1979 (NLSY79), he used the interaction between whether a person is Catholic and two
additional county-level measures of geographic proximity to private Catholic schools to
identify the exogenous effect of private Catholic schooling. His main conclusion was that
private Catholic schools were similar in quality to suburban public schools and slightly
better than the urban public schools that white students usually attend. However, private
Catholic schools were much better than the urban public schools that many minorities
attend, a finding later echoed in Horowitz and Spector (2005).
Using the NELS:88 dataset, Altonji, Elder and Taber. (2005a) explored the validity of
religious affiliation and the geographic proximity measures as exogenous sources of
variation in identifying the private Catholic school effect. Their findings suggested that
none of the instruments are useful in identifying a causal private Catholic school
effect.Note 4
More recent American studies used existing data on private schooling to address the
lack of exogenous variation in school choice. For example, with the NELS:88 data,
Altonji, Elder and Taber (2005b) examined the association between private Catholic
school attendance and several outcomes, including twelfth-grade reading and
mathematics tests scores, high school graduation, and college attendance. They had
several demographic covariates, but again, no school-level variables. Based on the
hypothesis that the amount of selection on the observed covariates can be used to
bound the amount of selection on the unobserved covariates, they found that private
Catholic schools substantially raise the probability of graduating from high school, and
more tentatively, attending college. However, they found no evidence of an association
between private Catholic school attendance and test scores.
Elder and Jepsen (2014) used the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study – Kindergarten
Class of 1998-99 (ECLS-K) to assess the effect of private Catholic primary schooling on
cognitive and non-cognitive outcomes measured between kindergarten and the eighth
grade. They presented evidence that the private Catholic school advantage in cognitive
and non-cognitive outcomes was entirely due to selection bias. Their approach followed
the selection on unobservables method developed by Altonji, Elder and Taber (2005b),
as well as various propensity score matching techniques. Once again, school-level
characteristics were absent from their study.
Hsieh and Urquiola (2006) examined a comprehensive voucher program introduced in
Chile in 1981. The program disbursed funds to non-tuition-charging private schools,
essentially placing them on an equal footing with public schools in terms of per-student
funding. Although these private “voucher schools” could not charge tuition, unlike public
schools, they had wide latitude in selecting students. Moreover, they could receive
outside donations, whereas public schools could not. The authors took advantage of the
fact that the voucher program had a larger impact on school enrolment decisions in
larger, more urban, and wealthier communities. The results of the study suggested that
the program led to a large increase in voucher school enrolment and increased sorting
(that is, the best public school students left for voucher schools), but no improvements
in educational outcomes were detected.
Perhaps the cleanest example of a causal study in this literature comes from Angrist et
al. (2002), who assessed the impact of the Columbian private secondary school
voucher program. In this case, the funds were disbursed directly to students attending
private schools. Because many of the vouchers were awarded by lottery, issues of
selectivity likely do not exist in this research. The results suggested that winning a
voucher lottery was associated with increased educational attainment. The authors
observed that this finding may be specific to a country like Columbia, which has a weak
public-school infrastructure and a well-developed private school system.Note 5
The current study contributes to the literature by being the first to directly assess the
roles of both student and school characteristics. The data contain detailed student,
parental and home environment information, as well as school resource and practice
indicators. Furthermore, the student data are collected within schools, which allows for
the creation of peer-level covariates (another school-level factor).Note 6 In this study,
peer effects are considered a school-level characteristic because they result from the
school’s ability to attract specific types of students.Note 7
This analysis contributes to the smaller, less developed Canadian literature on the topic.
The annual School Report Card released by the Fraser Institute in Alberta, British
Columbia, Ontario, and Quebec ranks schools based on standardized provincial exam
scores. The reports adjust for a limited number of local socio-economic characteristics.
For example, the Ontario analysis adjusts for average family income at the postal-code
level. However, evidence suggests that parents of children who attend Ontario private
schools tend, on average, to be more highly educated than parents of children who
attend Ontario public schools (Van Pelt, Allison and Allison 2007). Previous research
has shown that parental education is a much stronger correlate of child educational
success than family income (e.g., Frenette 2007).
Johnson (2005) advanced the Ontario analysis by accounting for a more detailed set of
socio-economic characteristics at the local level (including educational attainment) and
concluded that about 25% of the variation in school assessment results was associated
with observable community-level measures.
However, the main issue in using province-wide assessments to rank schools is that
private schools are generally not obliged to participate in these assessments. For
example, only five private schools appear in the Ontario data for the 2011/2012 Ontario
secondary school ranking in the Fraser Institute report. For the current study,
participation was voluntary for both the public and private sectors.
5 Results
This section compares nine academic outcomes for students who attended private and
public high schools.
In the reading test, private school students outperformed their public school
counterparts by 0.081 log points, or about 8% (Table 5). The gaps were slightly larger in
the mathematics and science tests. By age 23, 99% of private school students had
graduated from high school, about 3 percentage points above the figure for public
school students. The private school advantage was more evident in postsecondary
outcomes (measured at age 23)—postsecondary attendance (11.6 percentage points),
university attendance (17.8 percentage points), postsecondary graduation (16.2
percentage points), university graduation (13.9 percentage points), and graduate or
professional studies (8.1 percentage points).
Table 5 Academic outcomes, by type of high school attended
It is perhaps not surprising that private school students outperformed public school
students, given that private school students were more likely to have characteristics
positively associated with academic performance and educational attainment, and to
have peers with university-educated parents (Table 1).
To demonstrate the role of these characteristics in the gaps between the academic
outcomes of private and public school students, Table 6 shows the results of step-wise
ordinary least squares regressions. In the first model, no covariates were added. Each
outcome is regressed on a dummy variable indicating private school attendance. The
estimated coefficients simply replicate the gaps reported in Table 5.
In the second model, province fixed effects variables were added. For earlier outcomes
(high school performance and graduation), the result was a considerable reduction in
the private school advantage. However, postsecondary outcomes were largely
unaltered when province is taken into account. This may be because curriculum effects
have a larger role in high school outcomes than in postsecondary outcomes.
Next, the socio-economic characteristics listed in Table 1 were added. In all cases, this
substantially reduced the private school attendance coefficients. At this point, the
coefficient associated with the private school dummy variable may be interpreted as the
private school advantage, since school resources and practices, as well as peer effects,
have not been taken into account (two factors associated with school choice). For the
early outcomes (test scores and high school graduation), little, if any, private school
advantage emerged. However, private high school attendance was positively
associated with postsecondary attendance and graduation outcomes. Specifically,
postsecondary attendance and graduation outcomes were 5- to 9-percentage-points
higher among private high school students.
Table 6 Estimated relationship between academic outcome variables and private high
school attendance (ordinary least squares regression results)
The school resources and practices covariates in Table 2 were added in the fourth
model. In most instances, the private school advantage was fairly consistent when
differences in school resources and practices were taken into account. In no case did
the private school advantage substantially narrow. These results suggest that the
school resources and practices that are measured in the data generally do not work in
favour of either private or public school students.
The fifth model examined another school-level characteristic—the ability to recruit
“quality” students. As shown in Table 2, private schools are more likely to attract
students with university-educated parents. When this difference in peers is taken into
account, the private sector advantage declines considerably for most
outcomes.Note 23,Note 24,Note 25
To what extent do differences in these four sets of factors—province of study, socio-
economic characteristics, school resources and practices, and peers—contribute to the
overall gaps in academic outcomes? The answer can be found in Table 7, which
contains the results from Blinder-Oaxaca decompositions of the gaps in each of the nine
outcomes. These decompositions are based on the OLS coefficients from Table 6 and
the sample means displayed in Tables 1 and 2.
The total gaps are reported in the leftmost column of data. The second column shows
the proportion of the total gap in each outcome that can be accounted for by differences
in all of the covariates; depending on the outcome, the covariates accounted for 54% to
134% of the total gap. Together, the socio-economic covariates, peer effects, and
province fixed effects accounted for 59% to 147% of the total gap. In general, socio-
economic characteristics mattered most (accounting for one-quarter to one-half of the
gaps), followed by roughly equal contributions from province fixed effects and peer
effects. However, province fixed effects matter a great deal for high school outcomes
(test scores and graduation rates), but generally less for postsecondary outcomes. This
is consistent with the notion that province fixed effects reflect curriculum, which is
expected to matter more for test scores and high school graduation rates than for
postsecondary attendance.
By contrast, school resources and practices accounted for, at most, 13% of the gaps,
and at times, their contribution was negative.
Table 7 Proportion of gap in academic outcomes between private and public high
school students accounted for by differences in covariates (decomposition results)
6 Conclusion
It is well documented that private high school students generally outperform their public
school counterparts in the academic arena. But does this reflect the quality of the
private schools or the quality of the students they attract? This study attempts to answer
the question by analyzing detailed student background and school-level information that
has generally not been available in large datasets. This is the first study to directly
compare the relative contributions of both students and schools to differences between
the academic outcomes of students in private and public schools.
At age 15, private high school students scored significantly higher than did public high
school students on reading, mathematics, and science assessments, and by age 23,
had higher levels of educational attainment. However, the students who attended
private high schools were more likely to have socio-economic characteristics positively
associated with academic success, and to have school peers with university-educated
parents. Private schools were concentrated in certain provinces (and so had to follow
the provincial curriculum), but had similar resources and practices as public schools.
Two factors consistently accounted for the differences in academic outcomes between
public and private sector students: socio-economic characteristics and peers. The
province of school attendance accounted for a substantial portion of differences in
academic outcomes in high school (test scores and high school graduation rates), but
generally not at the postsecondary level. School resources and practices played little to
no role in the differences in any academic outcome.
An important research question remains unanswered. Specifically, do private high
school students outperform their public school counterparts in the labour market? The
higher rates of postsecondary attendance among private high school students may
translate to higher lifetime earnings (Frenette 2014). This effect may be amplified
through peers. A social network of gainfully employed friends may improve an
individual’s chances of securing a well-paying job. The YITS-A–PISA data used in this
study provide little information about this question, since students were not followed
beyond their mid-20s.Note 26
Notes
Footnote 1.
This is based on the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA),
which sampled 15-year-old youth in schools in 2000 (OECD 2011).
Return to note 1referrer
Footnote 2.
The main focus here is on high schools since this is the focus of the current study.
Return to note 2referrer
Footnote 3.
Religious schools comprised 85% of U.S. private school enrollment in 1990 (U.S.
Department of Education 1992).
Return to note 3referrer
Footnote 4.
They also showed that the nonlinearity embedded in the bivariate probit model is
the main source of identification when using the geographic proximity
instruments and suggested that bivariate probits might sometimes produce results
that are consistent with a powerful instrumental variable, but, in fact, the
underlying identification came from the functional form assumption of the model.
Return to note 4referrer
Footnote 5.
A few American states have also adopted a private school voucher system
targeted at students, but none are based on a true lottery. Rouse (1998) presented
an overview of impact evaluations of the first voucher program in the United
States: the Milwaukee Parental Choice Program.
Return to note 5referrer
Footnote 6.
The NLSY79 also contains school-level data for a smaller sample. However, no
studies have used these data to examine differences between the academic
outcomes of students in the public and private sectors.
Return to note 6referrer
Footnote 7.
Hanushek et al. (2003), Betts and Zau (2004), and Burke and Sass (2013) use
detailed data on students and schools and find evidence of positive effects of peer
backgrounds on student test scores.
Return to note 7referrer
Footnote 8.
Details on the YITS–PISA data are available from Statistics Canada (2005).
Return to note 8referrer
Footnote 9.
Some schools were excluded, such as schools on Indian reserves and other
schools for which it would be infeasible to administer the survey (for example,
home schooling and special needs schools). Such exclusions represented fewer
than 4% of 15-year-olds in Canada.
Return to note 9referrer
Footnote 10.
Because this number is not available by sector, it is not possible to determine if
the participation rate was the same across sectors. However, both sectors could
opt out, which is generally not the case in provincial standardized tests.
Return to note 10referrer
Footnote 11.
The Atlantic provinces are Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island,
Nova Scotia, and New Brunswick, together accounting for 7.9% of 15-year-olds
in Canada in 2000 (CANSIM table 051-0001).
Return to note 11referrer
Footnote 12.
The mathematics and science samples are about half as large.
Return to note 12referrer
Footnote 13.
The samples are not large enough to break down results by type of private school
(e.g., sectarian versus non-sectarian).
Return to note 13referrer
Footnote 14.
Overall attrition was 63% by cycle 6, compared with 50% by cycle 5.
Longitudinal weights are available to account for attrition bias, but adjustments
can be made only on observed characteristics: province, some schooling-related
information like social participation, overall scores, etc., and family structure and
social network variables (Statistics Canada 2009). Because other factors may
matter, and because the attrition rate is high, the cycle 6 sample may not yield
meaningful results.
Return to note 14referrer
Footnote 15.
Sample weights are used throughout the analysis. Separate weights are used for
the reading, mathematics and science samples. In all cases, cycle 5 weights are
used because this is the base sample used throughout the study. Also,100
bootstrap weights are applied for variance calculations.
Return to note 15referrer
Footnote 16.
When the outcome is binary (for example, high school graduation), logit and
probit models are estimated in addition to the OLS (linear probability) model.
Marginal probability effects are similar in all three models.
Return to note 16referrer
Footnote 17.
Dobbie and Fryer (2013) used a small sample of charter schools (schools that
receive public funding but operate independently) in New York City to
demonstrate that the traditional resource-based model of education, which
focuses on class size, per pupil expenditures, the fraction of teachers with no
teaching certification, and the fraction of teachers with an advanced degree, is not
positively correlated with school effectiveness. However, they found that an
index of five policies—frequent teacher feedback, the use of data to guide
instruction, high-dosage tutoring, increased instructional time, and high
expectations—explains about 45% of the variation in school effectiveness. From
the list provided above, the YITS-A–PISA data used in the current study allow
for the creation of variables closely related to these non-traditional factors except
for the use of data to guide instruction (which was not statistically significant in
the Dobbie and Fryer study).
Return to note 17referrer
Footnote 18.
See Frenette (2007) for the relationship between parental background and
university attendance, Frenette (2003) for the relationship between distance to
school and postsecondary attendance, and Frenette and Zeman (2007) for the
relationship between sex and university attendance.
Return to note 18referrer
Footnote 19.
This is the only subjective variable used in the present study. Principals were
asked to link low expectations from teachers to a school level outcome (learning).
The variable was included because it was found to be important by Dobbie and
Fryer (2013).
Return to note 19referrer
Footnote 20.
The main results of the study (to follow) are qualitatively similar whether or not
students in Quebec are included.
Return to note 20referrer
Footnote 21.
The public and private sector were coded manually based on responses to the
industry-of-work question on the LFS.
Return to note 21referrer
Footnote 22.
Further analysis showed that private high school teachers were more likely to live
in Quebec, where permanent teaching jobs are relatively scarce, and less likely to
live in Ontario, where permanent teaching jobs are more abundant. When
province of residence was taken into account (Table 4), the difference in the
prevalence of permanent jobs observed in Table 3 disappeared.
Return to note 22referrer
Footnote 23.
Three propensity score matching estimators yielded similar results to the OLS
figures in Table 6. Following Elder and Jepsen (2014), these included a kernel
density estimator (where an Epanechnikov kernel type with a bandwidth of 0.08
is specified), a nearest neighbour estimator (with four neighbours), and a caliper
estimator (with a radius of 0.0005). In all cases, the average treatment effect on
the treated was estimated (the matching estimator yielded the difference in mean
outcomes between private school students and their matched counterparts in the
public sector).
Return to note 23referrer
Footnote 24.
Private schools may confer different benefits to different students. To test this
hypothesis, simultaneous quantile regression models were estimated (for each
decile) for the log test scores in reading, mathematics, and science. All covariates
were included in these models, except school resources and practices, and peer
effects. The estimated coefficients may thus be attributed to the school. The
coefficients were roughly the same throughout the test score distribution. Results
from inter-quantile significance tests suggested that in only 5 of a possible 108
cases were the coefficients statistically significant (10% or less) across quantiles.
Return to note 24referrer
Footnote 25.
As shown in Table 2, private schools were far more likely than public schools to
be sectarian (religious). However, OLS regression models that omitted school
factors provided no statistical evidence of a difference in academic outcomes
between private sectarian and private non-sectarian schools.
Return to note 25referrer
Footnote 26.
The only possibility would be through record linkage involving the YITS-A–
PISA data and income tax data.
http://hanushek.stanford.edu/publications/importance-school-quality
Eric A. Hanushek
Published Date:
2002
Editors:
In Paul E. Peterson (ed.)
Publication:
Our Schools and Our Future: Are We Still at Risk?
Details:
(Stanford, CA: Hoover Institution Press)
https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/11f0019m/11f0019m2015367-eng.htm
Topic of Interest: The Differences between Students Performance in Rural and Urban
Areas
urban areas.
DISCUSSION
THE DIFFERENCES BETWEEN STUDENTS
PERFORMANCE IN RURAL AND URBAN AREAS
Recent educational research has examined rural and urban differences in their
achievement. Many educators, researchers, legislators and the general public believe
that students from rural schools mostly receive an education that is inferior compared to
the students that live in urban areas. Students background also impact on their
performance where we can see that many of the students that lives in rural areas has
low academic achievement when we compared it with the students that lives in urban
areas. There are many factors that cause to the gap performance between students in
rural and urban areas. Students in urban schools get many excess compared to students
in rural schools. The National Education Association said that the low performing youth
are in public rural schools (Brown & Swanson, 2001).
The excellent performance of urban students is because of their better quality in their
education, availability of the information that they get from various sources like mass
media and electronic media, their educated families and peers groups which help them
for better performance. They have many advantages and facilities in their education
compared to rural students. Students in rural areas less exposed to the outside world
and also lack of knowledge about the currents issues that happen.
Education is proving to be effective instrument that can raise students’ self-belief,
forethought, self-esteem and self-efficacy. Students that lives in undeveloped village
must try to attain the best education for them and do not make their living environment
as one of the factors that be a barrier in their success. We also can see that students in
rural areas are much less likely to earn a college degree than students of urban areas.
The disparity is highest in rural areas where only 8 percent of rural residents over age 25
have a college degree, compared with 16 percent of the residents in urban areas (U. S.
Bureau of the Census, 1999). So from these, we can clarify that, there is a gap of
performance between students that live in rural and urban areas due to some factors.
Family Factor
At the rural areas, family is one of the factors that determine their child performance. In
this study, students in rural areas have low performance compared to students in urban
areas because it is relate to their parents education. Majority of parents in rural areas are
less educated than parents in urban areas. The family background is the most important
and weighty factor in determining the academic performance of learners (Adell, 2002:
91). Survey found that, rural students felt no pressure to attain good performance when
their parents’ expectations towards education were low. Parental encouragement has a
positive influence towards their child performance and at rural areas most of parents did
not care about their child academic performance. Some experts believe that parent
expectations is the most influential factor affecting youth decisions to pursue education
(Esterman & Hedlund, 1995; Smith, Beaulieu, & Seraphine, 1995).
Role of Parents
While the teachers play their role at school, parents should play their roles at home.
Although parents in rural areas have no education, they can help their children
performance in terms of giving them moral supports and motivation to learn. Even they
cannot help in terms of provide resources to learn, they can give a support to their child
to study hard to change the fate of their family. Parents should realize how important of
education to their child and their future. Parents can always ask their child about their
learning progress and accompanied them during doing their work. They also must
always care about their child performance and monitor their progress.
CONCLUSION
The study presented the differences of performances between students in rural and
urban areas. Rural and urban schools are characterized by its unique strength and
weaknesses. “Rural and urban schools are much the same when it comes to resources
and learning environments” (EQR, 2003, p.45). Yet there are many variables that affect
students’ achievement and those variables are directly related to whether a school is
considered a rural or an urban school. Some factors that contribute to the gap
performances between students in these two areas were determined and also
recommendations in order to overcome this problem were suggested. Although some
recommendations have been highlighted, solutions might not be easy for them. The
suggestions for improving the performance among rural students is that they must
understand their environment properly, and maintain their inner resources like self-
efficacy and self-esteem. From this study we can conclude that, there have differences
between students performance in rural and urban schools. Students that lives in urban
area will get high performance excel opportunities provided by their location. Urban
students have greater access to many resources and therefore have opportunities that
are not easily accessible to rural students. Besides that urban parents were more
professional and they realize the advantage of education. Parents of rural students were
less likely to expect their children to advance their education. From the comparison of
this study we can know what the differences between rural and urban schools are.
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