Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Study Uncovers Why Students At Canadian Private High Schools Enjoy Academic Edge

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Mar, 2015 02:40 PM
  • Study Uncovers Why Students At Canadian Private High Schools Enjoy Academic Edge

TORONTO — Students attending private high schools do better academically than their public schools counterparts because of socio-economic factors and peers who tend to have university-educated parents, according to a Statistics Canada study released Tuesday.

School resources and practices play little or no role in the differences, the study concludes.

"Compared with public school students, higher percentages of private school students lived in two-parent families with both biological parents; their total parental income was higher; and they tended to live in homes with more books and computers," the researchers state.

Considered the first of its kind, the researchers sought to look at both the quality of private schools — attended by about six per cent of Canada's student population — and the students they attract to find out what accounted for the well documented differences in academic achievement.

According to the findings, private high school students score significantly higher on reading, mathematics, and science assessments at age 15. They also have higher levels of educational attainment by age 23.

Data show Quebec has the highest proportion of students in private schools — about one in five. By contrast, the Atlantic provinces have fewer than one in 100. As a result, the researchers looked at students in six provinces: Quebec, Ontario Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia.

While the research by StatsCan's Marc Frenette and Ping Ching Winnie Chan found that the province in which private schools are located makes a significant difference in terms of academic outcomes at the high-school level, it had no impact on achievement at the post-secondary level.

"By accounting for province-fixed effects and student socio-economic characteristics first, the remaining gap in academic performance between private and public school students can be roughly interpreted as the estimated marginal impact of private school attendance," the authors state. 

The researchers focused on about 7,000 students born in 1984 attending almost 1,180 schools. They relied on a review of current and recent literature, national and international surveys and questionnaires, and student tests.

"This study advances the literature by using a data set that contains information not only on students and their parents (including aspects of their home life), but also on school resources and practices, and province of school attendance," the study states.

Sample sizes did not allow for a breakdown of results by type of private school, many of which are religious based.

However, one important question remains unanswered, the study states: Does the academic advantage the private school students enjoy continue into the labour market?

"The higher rates of post-secondary attendance among private high school students may translate to higher lifetime earnings," the study notes.

"This effect may be amplified through peers: A social network of gainfully employed friends may improve an individual’s chances of securing a well-paying job."

MORE National ARTICLES

Ottawa ignoring ways to reduce number of missing, murdered native women: study

Ottawa ignoring ways to reduce number of missing, murdered native women: study
A study says the federal government is ignoring dozens of recommendations on how to reduce the number of missing and murdered aboriginal women.

Ottawa ignoring ways to reduce number of missing, murdered native women: study

Sentencing hearing for Calgary man in animal abuse case delayed another month

Sentencing hearing for Calgary man in animal abuse case delayed another month
CALGARY — More time is needed to complete a psychiatric assessment of a Calgary man who used Kijiji to find pets he methodically abused, starved and killed.

Sentencing hearing for Calgary man in animal abuse case delayed another month

Family of 3 slain children fears father who killed them remains high-risk

COQUITLAM, B.C. — The family of three murdered B.C. children whose father stabbed and smothered them fears he will unleash harm in the community if he is granted limited release, despite his psychiatrist's assurances.

Family of 3 slain children fears father who killed them remains high-risk

B.C. man accused of terrorism didn't want to die a martyr, trial hears

B.C. man accused of terrorism didn't want to die a martyr, trial hears
VANCOUVER — A British Columbia man accused of plotting to bomb the provincial legislature on Canada Day told an undercover RCMP officer that he didn't wish to die a martyr because he wanted to continue his mission, his trial has heard.

B.C. man accused of terrorism didn't want to die a martyr, trial hears

Slain B.C. woman's family fights for custody of her three children

Slain B.C. woman's family fights for custody of her three children
HOPE, B.C. — The brother of a woman killed last year says he and his wife are struggling to gain custody of his sister's three children in foster care.

Slain B.C. woman's family fights for custody of her three children

Tim Hortons co-founder, son, sued for $5.75M for alleged sex assault on yacht

Tim Hortons co-founder, son, sued for $5.75M for alleged sex assault on yacht
TORONTO — The billionaire co-founder of the Tim Hortons chain is among the targets of a lawsuit that alleges his son sexually and physically assaulted a woman on his luxury megayacht in Florida, according to her unproven statement of claim.

Tim Hortons co-founder, son, sued for $5.75M for alleged sex assault on yacht