Incidencia del trabajo infantil en el logro académico de alumnos de sexto grado: Hallazgos del terce

Translated title of the contribution: Impact of child labor on academic achievement for sixth graders in latin America: Findings from terce

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Child labor negatively affects children’s learning and futures if it lowers their chance to acquire math and reading skills. However, work outside of school could also provide an alternative path to adult socialization and material welfare where schools do not provide such a path. In Latin America the possible development of skills from work is not only an academic question, but also a critical point bearing on policy, because many children and youth divide their time and energies between both schooling and work. This article contributes to the debate about the net impact on academic achievement among children who both work and study during sixth grade. The article reports analysis of data from the TERCE survey of students and families in fifteen Latin American countries. OLS regression estimations suggest there is no level of paid or unpaid out-of-school work that is not associated with lowered academic achievement. HLM estimates controlling for school quality also show a negative association between work and proficiency in math and reading.

Translated title of the contributionImpact of child labor on academic achievement for sixth graders in latin America: Findings from terce
Original languageSpanish
Article number75
JournalEducation Policy Analysis Archives
Volume26
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 25 2018

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Education

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