For more than twenty years, large and generally stable differences in academic achievement and cognitive ability have been reported within Germany. In such studies, the southern regions lead in the west and east, while city-states lag behind. Expressed in school learning time, the students in Bavaria are 14 months ahead of the students in Bremen. It is striking that there are no or only marginally received studies on causes and consequences.
This study attempts to explore the causes and consequences of the differences within Germany and what can be learned in general about their development.
We use data from student assessment and other studies (e.g., PISA, IQB) and apply correlational and path analyses, controlled for various background factors.
There are no stable correlations with evolution (genes), educational level of society (adult school years) and wealth (GDP per capita). However, there are high correlations, robust across indicators, with “burgher-conservative” education policies, e.g., central exit examinations, early tracking, grades at a young age (around r ≈ .65); with measures of students’ quantity of education (hours of instruction, no teacher shortage; r ≈ .40); with measures of tertiary educational quality and appreciation of education (university quality, short duration of studies, professors’ salaries; r ≈ .50); with student native/immigrant ratio ( r ≈ .50); with middle-class burgher lifestyle (less private debt, less welfare dependency and less crime; r ≈ .60); and with burgher-conservative-right politics (share of votes for CDU/CSU and non-left parties, non-left state governments; r ≈ .80). Longitudinal analyses over four decades reveal interaction effects, i.e., more burgher policies statistically lead to more cognitively competent students ( β ≈ .45) and more cognitively competent populations vote for burgher parties ( β ≈ .30).
Within Germany, intelligence patterns were analyzed at the level of 16 states.
The south is ahead, city-states are behind.
Differences reach 8 IQ-points or 51 SASQ or 14 months of school-based learning.
Genetic factors seem not to be important, religious factors show weak impact.
Most important are burgher-conservative education policy and share of immigrants.
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