Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Adolescents and Educational Delay in Two Provinces in South Africa: Impacts of Personal, Family and School Characteristics

Authors

  • Rocio Herrero Romero Oxford University
  • Lucie Cluver University of Oxford University of Cape Town, South Africa
  • James Hall University of Southampton
  • Janina Steinert University of Oxford

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/1947-9417/2308

Keywords:

age-appropriate enrolment, ecological approach, educational delay, multinomial logistic regression, socioeconomic disadvantage

Abstract

No quantitative studies to date have specifically focused on the risk and protective factors for the educational resilience of socioeconomically disadvantaged adolescents who are not of compulsory school age in South Africa. This study compares the educational delay of 599 black adolescents aged 16 to 18 from socioeconomically disadvantaged communities in Western Cape and Mpumalanga to nationally and provincially representative estimates in South Africa. The paper also explores predictors for educational delay by comparing out-of-school adolescents (n = 64), and adolescents who are at least one year behind in school (n = 380), with adolescents in the age-appropriate grade or higher (n = 155). Risk factors for being behind included the following: male gender, past grade repetition, rural location and larger school size. Risk factors for being out of school were the following: past grade repetition, previous concentration problems at school, household poverty, and food insecurity. Protective factors for being in the age-appropriate grade included the following: living with biological caregivers, access to school counselling and attending schools in wealthier communities.

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Published

2018-05-28

How to Cite

Herrero Romero, Rocio, Lucie Cluver, James Hall, and Janina Steinert. 2018. “Socioeconomically Disadvantaged Adolescents and Educational Delay in Two Provinces in South Africa: Impacts of Personal, Family and School Characteristics”. Education As Change 22 (1):33 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/1947-9417/2308.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2017-03-10
Accepted 2018-04-30
Published 2018-05-28