Found 3414 Hypotheses across 342 Pages (0.005 seconds)
  1. Children in hunter-gatherer societies will more likely face infrastructural barriers to participating in schools.Ninkova, Velina - Hunter-Gatherer Children at School: A View From the Global South, 2024 - 2 Variables

    This study uses targeted literature surveys to explore why hunter-gatherer children in the Global South have much lower participation in formal schooling compared to other marginalized groups. Reviewing through various literatures, the article hypothesizes that cultural values of autonomy, combined with economic, infrastructural, and social barriers, conflict with the hierarchical structure of the formal education systems. Their review finds that while schools threaten the transmission of traditional knowledge and languages, communities also see them as potential sources of empowerment. The article concluded by emphasizing that hunter-gatherer groups themselves should determine the role and value of schooling for their children. No formal hypothesis tests were made.

    Related HypothesesCite
  2. Children with high autonomy will likely have the desire to receive formal education.Ninkova, Velina - Hunter-Gatherer Children at School: A View From the Global South, 2024 - 2 Variables

    This study uses targeted literature surveys to explore why hunter-gatherer children in the Global South have much lower participation in formal schooling compared to other marginalized groups. Reviewing through various literatures, the article hypothesizes that cultural values of autonomy, combined with economic, infrastructural, and social barriers, conflict with the hierarchical structure of the formal education systems. Their review finds that while schools threaten the transmission of traditional knowledge and languages, communities also see them as potential sources of empowerment. The article concluded by emphasizing that hunter-gatherer groups themselves should determine the role and value of schooling for their children. No formal hypothesis tests were made.

    Related HypothesesCite
  3. Children in hunter-gatherer societies will more likely face financial barriers to participating in schools.Ninkova, Velina - Hunter-Gatherer Children at School: A View From the Global South, 2024 - 2 Variables

    This study uses targeted literature surveys to explore why hunter-gatherer children in the Global South have much lower participation in formal schooling compared to other marginalized groups. Reviewing through various literatures, the article hypothesizes that cultural values of autonomy, combined with economic, infrastructural, and social barriers, conflict with the hierarchical structure of the formal education systems. Their review finds that while schools threaten the transmission of traditional knowledge and languages, communities also see them as potential sources of empowerment. The article concluded by emphasizing that hunter-gatherer groups themselves should determine the role and value of schooling for their children. No formal hypothesis tests were made.

    Related HypothesesCite
  4. Children in hunter-gatherer societies will more likely face social barriers to participating in schools.Ninkova, Velina - Hunter-Gatherer Children at School: A View From the Global South, 2024 - 2 Variables

    This study uses targeted literature surveys to explore why hunter-gatherer children in the Global South have much lower participation in formal schooling compared to other marginalized groups. Reviewing through various literatures, the article hypothesizes that cultural values of autonomy, combined with economic, infrastructural, and social barriers, conflict with the hierarchical structure of the formal education systems. Their review finds that while schools threaten the transmission of traditional knowledge and languages, communities also see them as potential sources of empowerment. The article concluded by emphasizing that hunter-gatherer groups themselves should determine the role and value of schooling for their children. No formal hypothesis tests were made.

    Related HypothesesCite
  5. Children with high autonomy will more likely drop out of their formal education.Ninkova, Velina - Hunter-Gatherer Children at School: A View From the Global South, 2024 - 2 Variables

    This study uses targeted literature surveys to explore why hunter-gatherer children in the Global South have much lower participation in formal schooling compared to other marginalized groups. Reviewing through various literatures, the article hypothesizes that cultural values of autonomy, combined with economic, infrastructural, and social barriers, conflict with the hierarchical structure of the formal education systems. Their review finds that while schools threaten the transmission of traditional knowledge and languages, communities also see them as potential sources of empowerment. The article concluded by emphasizing that hunter-gatherer groups themselves should determine the role and value of schooling for their children. No formal hypothesis tests were made.

    Related HypothesesCite
  6. Formal education will likely lead to the loss of languages for children in hunter-gatherer societies, because of language erosion.Ninkova, Velina - Hunter-Gatherer Children at School: A View From the Global South, 2024 - 2 Variables

    This study uses targeted literature surveys to explore why hunter-gatherer children in the Global South have much lower participation in formal schooling compared to other marginalized groups. Reviewing through various literatures, the article hypothesizes that cultural values of autonomy, combined with economic, infrastructural, and social barriers, conflict with the hierarchical structure of the formal education systems. Their review finds that while schools threaten the transmission of traditional knowledge and languages, communities also see them as potential sources of empowerment. The article concluded by emphasizing that hunter-gatherer groups themselves should determine the role and value of schooling for their children. No formal hypothesis tests were made.

    Related HypothesesCite
  7. The assimilation of the new values acquired at schools will likely affect the personal autonomy/social relations of the children in hunter-gatherer societies.Ninkova, Velina - Hunter-Gatherer Children at School: A View From the Global South, 2024 - 3 Variables

    This study uses targeted literature surveys to explore why hunter-gatherer children in the Global South have much lower participation in formal schooling compared to other marginalized groups. Reviewing through various literatures, the article hypothesizes that cultural values of autonomy, combined with economic, infrastructural, and social barriers, conflict with the hierarchical structure of the formal education systems. Their review finds that while schools threaten the transmission of traditional knowledge and languages, communities also see them as potential sources of empowerment. The article concluded by emphasizing that hunter-gatherer groups themselves should determine the role and value of schooling for their children. No formal hypothesis tests were made.

    Related HypothesesCite
  8. Coercion and corporal punishment will likely affect the behavior of children.Ninkova, Velina - Hunter-Gatherer Children at School: A View From the Global South, 2024 - 2 Variables

    This study uses targeted literature surveys to explore why hunter-gatherer children in the Global South have much lower participation in formal schooling compared to other marginalized groups. Reviewing through various literatures, the article hypothesizes that cultural values of autonomy, combined with economic, infrastructural, and social barriers, conflict with the hierarchical structure of the formal education systems. Their review finds that while schools threaten the transmission of traditional knowledge and languages, communities also see them as potential sources of empowerment. The article concluded by emphasizing that hunter-gatherer groups themselves should determine the role and value of schooling for their children. No formal hypothesis tests were made.

    Related HypothesesCite
  9. Parents will be more likely to transmit cultural norms of marital residence to educated children.Bau, Natalie - Can Policy Change Culture? Government Pension Plans and Traditional Kinship ..., 2021 - 2 Variables

    In this paper, the author examines the effects of recent pension policies in Indonesia and Ghana on the practice of matri- or patrilocality. She also explores the relationships between these policies, marital residence, education, and elderly support. Her findings show that both matri/patrilocality and the investment parents make in their children have declined since the implementation of the pension plans.

    Related HypothesesCite
  10. The maintenance of the mother tongue into the third generation is related to schools emphasizing ethnic group identity.Schrauf, Robert W. - Mother Tongue Maintenance Among North American Ethnic Groups, 1999 - 2 Variables

    Using HRAF's ethnographic reports from 11 immigrant groups to North America (1959-1989), the author asks: what social structural factors account for these patterns of language loss and retention? While focusing on the second and third generations, this study assesses the impact of residence, religion, school, festivals, homeland, marriage, and labor on language retention. The author suggests that residential closeness and the continued practice of religious rituals from the country of origin are the main factors influencing mother tongue maintenance into the third generation, while participation in community festivals is a marginal predictor.

    Related HypothesesCite