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Articles

Single‐sex schooling and labour market outcomes

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Pages 311-332 | Published online: 07 Mar 2011
 

Abstract

One quarter of the 1958 British Birth cohort attended single‐sex secondary schools. This paper asks whether sex‐segregated schooling had any impact on the experience of gender differences in the labour market in mid‐life. We examine outcomes at age 42, allowing for socio‐economic origins and abilities measured in childhood. We find no net impact of single‐sex schooling on the chances of being employed in 2000, nor on the horizontal or social class segregation of mid‐life occupations. But we do find a positive premium (5%) on the wages of women (but not men), of having attended a single‐sex school. This was accounted for by the relatively good performance of girls‐only school students in post‐16 qualifications, not by the wider range of subjects studied by both girls and boys at single‐sex schools. Men’s labour market attainments were more closely related to attending private schools and to parental class, suggesting that the intergenerational transmission of advantage, while not related to coeducation, is related to gender.

Acknowledgements

We would like to dedicate this paper to the memory of our colleague Diana Leonard.

This work was funded by ESRC Award RES‐000‐22‐1085. Thanks are due to the National Child Development Study survey members for their contribution over many years. Thanks also to the Oxford Review of Education’s reviewers for their comments.

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