Chinese Journal of Society ›› 2017, Vol. 3 ›› Issue (4): 491-517.doi: 10.1177/2057150X17736664

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Cumulative adversity, childhood behavioral problems, and educational mobility in China's poorest rural communities

Wensong Shen1, Li-Chung Hu2 and Emily Hannum1,3   

  1. 1 Department of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA 2 Department of Sociology, National Chengchi University, Taipei, China 3 Population Studies Center, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
  • Online:2017-10-01 Published:2017-10-01
  • Contact: Wensong Shen, Department of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, 3718 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6299, USA. Email: wensong@sas.upenn.edu

Abstract:

Behavioral problems are recognized as playing a potentially important role in educational attainment, but their function in contexts of extreme poverty is not well understood. In such settings, other factors might swamp any effects of children's behavioral problems. Further, the interpretation of behavioral problems in circumstances of deep poverty is not clear: problematic behaviors might be in part a direct function of adverse experiences in childhood. In this paper, we focus on the case of 2000 rural youth sampled in the year 2000 from 100 villages in Gansu, one of China's poorest provinces, and followed up through 2015. We investigate whether behavioral problems—internalizing problems, externalizing problems, and teacher-reported behavior problems—predict subsequent educational attainment among the rural poor, and consider the contributions of cumulative adversity to behavioral problems. Results in a highpoverty context where promotion decisions are closely tied to performance show that behavioral factors are linked to long-term educational outcomes. These results are robust to adjustment for a host of individual, family, and community context variables. There is some evidence that children in higher socioeconomic status families and in more developed communities are less vulnerable to experiencing behavioral problems. While girls are slightly less vulnerable to experiencing teacher-reported behavior problems than boys, there is no gender difference in the implications of behavioral problems for educational attainment. Finally, behavioral problems do not appear to operate simply as a proxy for measured family adversity.

Key words: Adversity, behavioral problems, child poverty, China, conduct problems, education