Article (Scientific journals)
The meritocracy trap: Early childhood education policies promote individual achievement far more than social cohesion.
BOBROWICZ, Katarzyna; Gracia, Pablo; TEUBER, Ziwen et al.
2025In PLoS ONE, 20 (7), p. 0326021
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
 

Files


Full Text
journal.pone.0326021.pdf
Publisher postprint (1.55 MB) Creative Commons License - Attribution
Download

All documents in ORBilu are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Keywords :
Humans; Child; Child, Preschool
Abstract :
[en] Governments worldwide have reformed early childhood education (ECE) to equip young people with competitive skills for an increasingly specialized workforce. These reforms have coincided with a widespread acceptance of meritocratic beliefs holding that talent and effort, rather than uncontrollable factors (e.g., luck, social context), determine individuals' lifetime success and achievement. This study examines whether recent ECE reforms may have promoted an economic meritocratic mindset that favors skills linked to individual competition for future achievement. Data came from a total of 92 documents published between 1999 and 2023, including ECE advisory reports from international organizations and government-endorsed ECE curricula from 53 countries across Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe, and Oceania. A step-by-step thematic analysis was conducted through combining qualitative text coding with statistical analyses applied to the emerging themes. Findings show that: (1) while experts and policymakers recognized the importance of ECE access and quality, they defined social cohesion primarily through economic indicators; (2) ECE documents prioritized cognitive skills and -mostly among international organizations- socioemotional skills as key for individual achievement, but citizenship skills were largely omitted; (3) individual agency and responsibility within ECE contexts were defined as central to educational and lifetime success, while uncontrollable factors (e.g., intergenerational transmission of advantage, family origin) were largely neglected; (4) both international organizations and governments strongly embraced an economic meritocratic mindset in ECE, implying that life outcomes mainly depend on talent and effort, obscuring the role of support and solidarity from peers, relatives, communities or institutions. Overall, this study suggests that ECE reforms have globally reinforced the pitfalls of meritocracy by promoting educational policies that prioritize competition over cooperation, individualism over solidarity, and the widespread notion that talent and effort, rather than uncontrollable factors such as luck or social context, determine individuals' lifetime success in society.
Disciplines :
Education & instruction
Author, co-author :
BOBROWICZ, Katarzyna  ;  University of Luxembourg ; Psychology and Neuroscience of Cognition, Faculté de Psychologie, Logopédie et Sciences de l'Éducation, Université de Liège, Liège, Belgium
Gracia, Pablo;  Department of Sociology, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Bellaterra, Spain ; Centre d'Estudis Demogràfics, CED-CERCA, Bellaterra, Spain
TEUBER, Ziwen  ;  University of Luxembourg
GREIFF, Samuel ;  University of Luxembourg ; School of Social Sciences and Technology & Centre of International Student Assessment, Technical University Munich, Munich, Germany
External co-authors :
yes
Language :
English
Title :
The meritocracy trap: Early childhood education policies promote individual achievement far more than social cohesion.
Publication date :
02 July 2025
Journal title :
PLoS ONE
eISSN :
1932-6203
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), United States
Volume :
20
Issue :
7
Pages :
e0326021
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBilu :
since 03 July 2025

Statistics


Number of views
147 (13 by Unilu)
Number of downloads
47 (4 by Unilu)

Scopus citations®
 
0
Scopus citations®
without self-citations
0
OpenCitations
 
0
OpenAlex citations
 
0

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBilu