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Applying path analysis to 237 secondary school students and 320 post-secondary students in Singapore, parents’ education was found to have important effects on adolescents’ educational aspiration as mediated through educational track and adolescents’ financial stress and self-esteem. This effect is strong for adolescents in both secondary and post-secondary education, with slight differences in the specific psychological process. The findings imply calibration of education towards parity and psychosocial interventions to improve adolescents’ self-concepts, coping and aspirations. However, in the context of fast economic transformation, a burgeoning middle class, a differentiated education system, and high-income inequality, policy and psychosocial interventions will have limited effectiveness without addressing labour market disparities and the social stigma of vocational and technical education.
Ng et al. (Tue,) studied this question.