Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
354437 | Economics of Education Review | 2012 | 15 Pages |
We evaluate how far away six Latin American countries stand from a normative goal of equality of opportunity for educational achievement in PISA 2006–2009. We work with alternative characterizations of types: gender, school type (public or private), parental education, and their combinations. Following Checchi–Peragine's (2010) non-parametric method, we find that inequality of opportunity for educational achievement in Latin America ranges from less than 1% to up to 25%, depending on the year, the country, the subject and the specification of circumstances. These magnitudes are substantial with respect to what is found in comparator countries. Parental education and school type prove to be important sources of inequality of opportunity, contrary to gender. By means of sensitivity analyses, while most results show small to moderate variation in terms of magnitudes, in ordinal terms (rankings) they remain quite stable. Brazil stands out as the most opportunity-unequal country of the sample.
► We assess inequality of opportunity in educational achievement in six Latin American countries. ► It is included an alternative characterization of the circumstances (simple and composed). ► The type of school seems to be a very important circumstance. ► Unfair inequality exhibits considerable heterogeneity among countries, subjects and years.