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    PLoS One. 2009 Oct 30;4(10):e7664.

    Education in time: cohort differences in educational attainment in African-American twins.

    Source

    Johns Hopkins School of Nursing, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. sszanton@son.jhmi.edu

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVES:

    Educational opportunities for African-Americans expanded throughout the 20(th) century. Twin pairs are an informative population in which to examine changes in educational attainment because each twin has the same parents and childhood socioeconomic status. We hypothesized that correlation in educational attainment of older twin pairs would be higher compared to younger twin pairs reflecting changes in educational access over time and potentially reflecting a "ceiling effect" associated with Jim Crow laws and discrimination.

    METHODOLOGY AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS:

    We used data from 211 same-sex twin pairs (98 identical, 113 fraternal) in the Carolina African-American Twin Study of Aging who were identified through birth records. Participants completed an in-person interview. The twins were predominantly female (61%), with a mean age of 50 years (SD = 0.5). We found that older age groups had a stronger intra-twin correlation of attained educational level. Further analysis across strata revealed a trend across zygosity, with identical twins demonstrating more similar educational attainment levels than did their fraternal twin counterparts, suggesting a genetic influence.

    DISCUSSION:

    These findings suggest that as educational opportunities broadened in the 20th century, African-Americans gained access to educational opportunities that better matched their individual abilities.

    PMID:
    19888338
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID: PMC2765648
    Free PMC Article

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