Periodic Reporting for period 1 - InterGen (Growing up among bright books and generous genes: The InterGenerational cycle of educational achievement)
Período documentado: 2023-09-01 hasta 2026-02-28
Using large-scale twin, family, and genomic data from the Netherlands and Norway, InterGen aims to disentangle the complex intergenerational links between parents’ and children’s education. Its five work packages combine cutting-edge behaviour-genetic models, extended family and register data, and new online assessments in Dutch twin families. The expected impact is a deeper scientific understanding of why educational inequalities persist and practical insights that can inform education and mental-health policy.
* Analyses of Norwegian register and cohort data (N ≈ 600 000) revealed that parental education relates to children’s school achievement largely through genetic transmission, with smaller parental and extended-family environmental effects.
* A complementary Nature Human Behaviour paper showed that genetic influences on children’s education extend beyond the nuclear family, reflecting broader social processes.
* Methodological advances include the first empirical use of the new iAM-CoTS model and simulation studies on cultural transmission and sibling interaction.
* Preparations for the Dutch TwinWise data collection produced two successful adult pilot studies, open-access materials (Kuijper et al., 2025), and ethical approval for a school-based child pilot.
* The ERC team grew to include a PhD student, postdoc, assistant professor, and research assistant, creating strong interdisciplinary capacity across genetics, education, and psychology.
Methodologically, InterGen advances open, reproducible science through new simulation tools, extended-family modelling, and large-scale online cognitive assessments. The results already influence interdisciplinary discussions in education, psychiatry, and population health, helping to guide more realistic and equitable strategies to support children’s learning.