New research, led by
King's College London finds that the high heritability of exam grades reflects
many genetically influenced traits such as personality, behaviour problems, and
self-efficacy and not just intelligence.
The study, published
today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS),
looked at 13,306 twins at age 16 who were part of the Medical Research Council
(MRC) funded UK Twins Early Development Study (TEDS). The twins were assessed on
a range of cognitive and non-cognitive measures, and the researchers had access
to their GCSE (General Certificate of Secondary Education) scores.
In total, 83 scales
were condensed into nine domains: intelligence, self-efficacy (confidence in
one's own academic ability), personality, well-being, home environment, school
environment, health, parent-reported behaviour problems and child reported
behaviour problems.
Identical twins
share 100% of their genes, and non-identical twins (just as any other siblings)
share 50% of the genes that vary between people. Twin pairs share the same
environment (family, schools, teachers etc). By comparing identical and
non-identical twins, the researchers were able to estimate the relative
contributions of genetic and environmental factors. So, if overall, identical
twins are more similar on a particular trait than non-identical twins, the
differences between the two groups are due to genetics, rather than
environment.
Eva Krapohl, joint
first author of the study, from the Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology &
Neuroscience (IoPPN) at King's, says: "Previous work has already
established that educational achievement is heritable. In this study, we wanted
to find out why that is. What our study shows is that the heritability of
educational achievement is much more than just intelligence – it is the
combination of many traits which are all heritable to different extents.
"It is
important to point out that heritability does not mean that anything is set in
stone. It simply means that children differ in how easy and enjoyable they find
learning and that much of these differences are influenced by genetics."
The researchers
found that the heritability of GCSE scores was 62%. Individual traits were
between 35% and 58% heritable, with intelligence being the most highly
heritable. Together, the nine domains accounted for 75% of the heritability of
GCSE scores.
Heritability is a
population statistic which does not provide any information at an individual
level. It describes the extent to which differences between children can be
ascribed to DNA differences, on average, in a particular population at a
particular time.
Kaili Rimfeld,
joint-lead author, also from the IoPPN at King's says: "No policy
implications necessarily follow from finding that genetics differences
influence educational achievement, because policy depends on values and
knowledge. However, our findings support the idea that a more personalized
approach to learning may be more successful than a one size fits all approach. Finding
that educational achievement is heritable certainly does not mean that
teachers, parents or schools aren't important. Education is more than what
happens to a child passively; children are active participants in selecting,
modifying, and creating their experiences – much of which is linked to their
genetic propensities, known in genetics as genotype–environment
correlation."
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