• Too much of a good thing? Gender, ‘concerted cultivation’ and unequal achievement in primary education.

    It is well established that cultural and economic resources imparted to children vary significantly by social class. Literature on concerted cultivation has highlighted the way out-of-school activities can reproduce social inequalities in the classroom. Within this literature however, little attenti…

  • The Role of Disability and Parental Expectations in Child Wellbeing

    This study identified ways to improve the social and educational outcomes of children with disabilities, including informing parents about the school and post-school options available.

  • The role of parental expectations in understanding social and academic well-being among children with disabilities in Ireland

    This paper draws on longitudinal data to examine the extent to which parents’ educational expectations shape academic development and changes in self-concept among young people with different types of disability. The analysis is based on the Growing Up in Ireland longitudinal study, which tracked 74…

  • The Effects of School Social Mix: Unpacking the Differences

    Whether school composition makes a difference for student outcomes has been the subject of much controversy. This article draws on Growing Up in Ireland data, a rich source of information on nine-year-old children along with the characteristics of their school and classroom teacher. In contrast to m…

  • The Primary Classroom: Insights from the Growing Up in Ireland Study.

  • Digital technologies and student learning

  • Insights into the Prevalence of Special Educational Needs

    Chapter 8 examines aspects of provision for children with special educational needs and considers their inclusion within Irish mainstream education in recent years. It considers how much of the education and care of children with special needs in the early decades of the 20th century was provided by…

  • Shadow Education uptake among final year students in Irish secondary schools: Wellbeing in a high stakes context

    This paper assesses the role of shadow education (SE), i.e. organised learning activities outside formal schooling, in the lives of secondary school students of different social backgrounds and in different school settings, in a high-stakes context. It draws on multilevel analysis of longitudinal Gr…

  • Gender stereotyping in mothers’ and teachers’ perceptions of boys’ and girls’ mathematics performance in Ireland

    Parents’ and teachers’ beliefs and evaluations of young people are important. Using a feminist institutionalist perspective, and drawing on rich data from one in seven nine-year-old children in Ireland, this paper examines mothers’ (who make up the overwhelming majority of primary care-givers) and t…

  • Secondary school transition for students with special educational needs in Ireland

    The transition from primary to secondary school represents one of the key junctions in the educational career of young people. Research has shown that much of the challenge in this transition stems from changing social structures and encountering different learning environments. However, the transit…

  • The effect of breastfeeding on neuro-development in infancy.

    The present study examines whether breastfeeding is associated with neuro-developmental advantages at 9 months of age on a standardised measure of infant development in a large cohort study of Irish children. It is hypothesised that if breast-milk confers an independent benefit, infants who were nev…

  • The effect of breastfeeding on children’s educational test scores at nine years of age: Results of an Irish cohort study.

    This retrospective cross-sectional paper examines the relationship between early breastfeeding exposure and children’s academic test scores at nine years of age independent of a wide range of possible confounders. The final sample comprised 8226 nine-year-old school children participating in the fir…

Cohort ’24

Cohort ’08

Cohort ’98