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Registered Indian Children's School Success and Intergenerational Effects of Residential Schooling in Canada

Using the 2006 Aboriginal Peoples Survey, this study investigates factors associated with school success (as perceived by parents) among off-reserve Registered Indian children aged 6 to 14 in Canada. Holding other factors constant, Registered Indian children were more likely to be doing well at scho...

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Published in:International indigenous policy journal 2010-01, Vol.1 (1), p.5
Main Authors: Bougie, Evelyne, Senecal, Sacha
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description Using the 2006 Aboriginal Peoples Survey, this study investigates factors associated with school success (as perceived by parents) among off-reserve Registered Indian children aged 6 to 14 in Canada. Holding other factors constant, Registered Indian children were more likely to be doing well at school if they were living in households with high income, were living in adequately maintained dwellings, or spoke an Aboriginal language at home. Boys and older children, on the other hand, were less likely to be doing well at school, as were children who were living in larger households, experienced food insecurity, or had parents who attended residential school. Mediation analyses revealed that the negative intergenerational effect of parental residential schooling on children's school success was partially attributable to household characteristics or economic status. Indeed, former residential school attendees were found to be more likely to live in households with a lower income, live in larger households, and report that their family had experienced food insecurity. These characteristics were, in turn, found to be negatively associated with children's school success. Adapted from the source document.
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subjects Academic Achievement
Canada
Children
education
Educational Attainment
Educational Sociology
Family School Relationship
Food
Food security
Generational Differences
High Schools
Home education
Households
Income
Indians
Indigenous Populations
Native North Americans
Native peoples
Parents
Registered Indian
residential school
school success
Schools
Socioeconomic Status
Success
title Registered Indian Children's School Success and Intergenerational Effects of Residential Schooling in Canada
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