183: The Genetic Lottery Goes to School: Better Schools Compensate for Genetic Differences episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 30, 2025 · 18 MIN

183: The Genetic Lottery Goes to School: Better Schools Compensate for Genetic Differences

from Base by Base · host Gustavo Barra

️ Episode 183: The Genetic Lottery Goes to School: Better Schools Compensate for Genetic Differences In this episode of PaperCast Base by Base, we explore a large causal study from Norway asking whether school quality can offset genetic differences in students’ academic skills. Using parent–offspring genetic trios from the Norwegian Mother, Father, and Child Cohort (MoBa) and nationwide administrative data, the authors combine within-family polygenic indices for educational attainment with school value-added measures to test if better schools compensate for genetic disparities. Study Highlights:The researchers computed polygenic indices for educational attainment for children while controlling for parental indices to isolate random within-family genetic variation and paired these with causal value-added estimates of school quality derived from population registers. They found a negative gene–environment interaction for reading, indicating that higher-quality schools reduce the impact of polygenic differences on reading scores by about six percent per one standard deviation of school quality exposure in grade 8, with the effect driven by gains among students at the lower end of the polygenic index distribution. For numeracy, the interaction was null despite clear main effects of both genetics and school value-added, a pattern consistent with higher persistence of numeracy skills during this developmental period. Validation analyses supported exogeneity of the within-family genetic component and of the school value-added measures, and sensitivity checks suggested that the findings are not artifacts of test scaling or ceiling effects. fileciteturn0file0 Conclusion:In a causally identified framework, better schools can partially compensate for genetic differences in reading but not numeracy during lower secondary school, implying that investments in school quality may narrow genetically correlated gaps in foundational literacy. Reference:Cheesman R, Borgen N, Sandsør AMJ, Hufe P. The genetic lottery goes to school: Better schools compensate for the effects of students’ genetic differences. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2025;122(43):e2511715122. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2511715122 License:This episode is based on an open-access article published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0) – https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Support:If you'd like to support Base by Base, you can make a one-time or monthly donation here: https://basebybase.castos.com/

️ Episode 183: The Genetic Lottery Goes to School: Better Schools Compensate for Genetic Differences In this episode of PaperCast Base by Base, we explore a large causal study from Norway asking whether school quality can offset genetic differences in students’ academic skills. Using parent–offspring genetic trios from the Norwegian Mother, Father, and Child Cohort (MoBa) and nationwide administrative data, the authors combine within-family polygenic indices for educational attainment with school value-added measures to test if better schools compensate for genetic disparities. Study Highlights:The researchers computed polygenic indices for educational attainment for children while controlling for parental indices to isolate random within-family genetic variation and paired these with causal value-added estimates of school quality derived from population registers. They found a negative gene–environment interaction for reading, indicating that higher-quality schools reduce the impact of polygenic differences on reading scores by about six percent per one standard deviation of school quality exposure in grade 8, with the effect driven by gains among students at the lower end of the polygenic index distribution. For numeracy, the interaction was null despite clear main effects of both genetics and school value-added, a pattern consistent with higher persistence of numeracy skills during this developmental period. Validation analyses supported exogeneity of the within-family genetic component and of the school value-added measures, and sensitivity checks suggested that the findings are not artifacts of test scaling or ceiling effects. fileciteturn0file0 Conclusion:In a causally identified framework, better schools can partially compensate for genetic differences in reading but not numeracy during lower secondary school, implying that investments in school quality may narrow genetically correlated gaps in foundational literacy. Reference:Cheesman R, Borgen N, Sandsør AMJ, Hufe P. The genetic lottery goes to school: Better schools compensate for the effects of students’ genetic differences. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 2025;122(43):e2511715122. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2511715122 License:This episode is based on an open-access article published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC BY 4.0) – https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Support:If you'd like to support Base by Base, you can make a one-time or monthly donation here: https://basebybase.castos.com/

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183: The Genetic Lottery Goes to School: Better Schools Compensate for Genetic Differences

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️ Episode 183: The Genetic Lottery Goes to School: Better Schools Compensate for Genetic Differences In this episode of PaperCast Base by Base, we explore a large causal study from Norway asking whether school quality can offset genetic differences...

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