New unit at UCPH to put focus on research into children and education
New funding from the Ministry of Children and Education will enable researchers from across the Faculty of Social Sciences to strengthen quantitative research into how parent background and special measures against inequality impact children’s education and their social mobility.
Over the next four years, the Department of Economics, the Department of Sociology and the Copenhagen Center for Social Data Science will house a new, cross-disciplinary research unit, UDDanKvant, which together with the Ministry of Children and Education will strengthen quantitative research into children and education in Denmark.
The Ministry of Children and Education has initiated the new unit, which the ministry will support with DKK 7.5 million towards the autumn of 2024. In addition, self-financing and external funding will ensure that the new unit has a base of eight experienced researchers as well as two PhD students and two postdocs.
The new research unit will focus specifically on the factors that affect children and youth’s path through the educational system. It will launch several subprojects, which will use advanced statistical and econometric models to uncover why some children do better than others. The ultimate goal is to provide children with better education regardless of their background.
“We look forward to working together with the Ministry of Children and Education,” says Professor Mette Ejrnæs from the Department of Economics, who will be the Day-to-Day Manager of UDDanKvant.
“A prerequisite for conducting high-quality, quantitative research into children and education is access to high-quality data, detailed knowledge of the area, including political measures, and strong quantitative competences. The ministry has detailed knowledge of data and their own measures, whereas the researchers affiliated with the unit can provide knowledge of the latest quantitative research methods. Together, this gives us a unique opportunity to create new knowledge of the area,” she says.
The Ministry of Children and Education has chosen to base the new research environment at the University of Copenhagen following a round of applications where the ministry was looking for a unit that could help support policy development as well as local and national decision-making in the area of children and education. Among other things, UDDanKvant will be tasked with providing consultancy and skill development with regard to the ministry’s own analysis and knowledge efforts as well as holding conferences and courses.
Focus on inequality and social mobility
Over the next four years, the research unit will launch no less than nine subprojects, which from various angles will study the significance of parent background and explore the many choices and circumstances that may affect children and youth’s education throughout life.
Even though we often boast of our great social equality, there are limits to social mobility in Denmark.
Social inheritance and the ability to break with it will run as a red thread throughout the subprojects. One example is a study to be conducted by Associate Professor Kristian Bernt Karlson and Professor Mads Meier Jæger from the Department of Sociology.
Based on data from Statistics Denmark, the project will uncover how much better a student from a socioeconomically disadvantaged family must do in school to have the same chances as more privileged children of getting a youth education or a higher education.
“Even though we often boast of our great social equality, there are limits to social mobility in Denmark. We therefore wish to determine to which extent academic qualifications can help break the social inheritance today. Here records from Statistics Denmark offer a unique opportunity to study entire year groups and look at the development over time,” says Kristian Bernt Karlson.
Other subprojects will answer questions like:
- How does starting in nursery early affect the child’s path through the educational system?
- What is the effect of extra resources for day care facilities in socially disadvantaged neighbourhoods?
- How does the parents’ choice of school affect the child’s opportunities later in life?
- And how does mental illness and vulnerability among youth affect their performance in youth education programmes?
Using new methods
The Copenhagen Center for Social Data Science (SODAS) will play a special role in using new forms of machine learning (artificial intelligence) and big data to measure the effect of interventions and to discover causalities within education, which more classical methods have difficulties uncovering.
“Among other things, we want to determine how new types of data from e.g. teaching apps can help us identify factors that affect students’ learning. And by also using new tools that combine data science and econometrics, we will be able to provide more targeted recommendations regarding future initiatives,” explains Assistant Professor Andreas Bjerre-Nielsen from SODAS.
The research unit will commence work this fall and has received funding up until the end of 2024.
Emner
Relaterede nyheder
Kontakt
Mette Ejrnæs
Professor at Department of Economics
Email: mette.ejrnes@econ.ku.dk
Telephone: +45 35 32 30 62
Kristian Bernt Karlson
Associate Professor at Department of Sociology
Email: kbk@soc.ku.dk
Telephone: +45 35 32 15 88
Andreas Bjerre-Nielsen
Assistant Professor, SODAS
Email: abn@sodas.ku.dk
Telephone: +45 35 32 44 17
About the research unit
With support from the Ministry of Children and Education, the new research unit, UDDanKvant, aims to strengthen quantitative research into children and education by building more evidence and conducting new impact studies.
At the same time, the unit will act as a sparring partner in connection with the ministry’s own analyses and knowledge work, and it will organise a series of conferences, courses and network activities.
UDDanKvant will be active from the fall of 2021 and up until the fall of 2024, and it has received funding of just over DKK 11 million.
From the Department of Economics, the following researchers will be affiliated with the unit:
- Professor Mette Ejrnæs, Day-to-Day Manager of the unit
- Assistant Professor Mette Foged
- Associate Professor Miriam Gensowski
- Associate Professor Mette Gørtz
- Associate Professor Miriam Wüst
From the Department of Sociology:
- Associate Professor Kristian Bernt Karlson
- Professor Mads Meier Jæger
From SODAS:
- Assistant Professor Andreas Bjerre-Nielsen
In addition, the research unit will be hiring two postdocs and two PhD students, who will be affiliated with the Department of Economics, the Department of Sociology and SODAS.
Also read about the new unit at the Ministry of Children and Education’s website (in Danish only): Ny forskningsenhed skal styrke kvantitativ børne- og undervisningsforskning