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Connolly, P. (2006) Summary statistics, educational
achievement gaps and the ecological fallacy, Oxford Review of
Education, 32(2): 235-252.
Summary statistics continue to play an important role in identifying
and monitoring patterns and trends in educational inequalities between
differing groups of pupils over time. However, this article argues
that their uncritical use can also encourage the labelling of whole
groups of pupils as ‘underachievers’ or ‘overachievers’
as the findings of group-level data are simply applied to individual
group members, a practice commonly termed the ‘ecological
fallacy’. Some of the adverse consequences of this will be
outlined in relation to current debates concerning gender and ethnic
differences in educational attainment. It will be argued that one
way of countering this uncritical use of summary statistics and
the ecological fallacy that it tends to encourage, is to make much
more use of the principles and methods of what has been termed ‘exploratory
data analysis’. Such an approach is illustrated through a
secondary analysis of data from the Youth Cohort Study of England
and Wales, focusing on gender and ethnic differences in educational
attainment. It will be shown that, by placing an emphasis on the
graphical display of data and on encouraging researchers to describe
those data more qualitatively, such an approach represents an essential
addition to the use of simple summary statistics and helps to avoid
the limitations associated with them.
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