Religion and Education Around the World
"Pew Research Center," December 13, 2016 
Jews are more highly educated than any other major religious group around  
the world, while Muslims and Hindus tend to have the fewest years of formal  
schooling, according to a Pew Research Center global demographic study that 
 shows wide disparities in average educational levels among religious  
groups. 
These  gaps in educational attainment are partly a function of where 
religious groups  are concentrated throughout the world. For instance, the vast 
majority of the  world’s Jews live in the United States and Israel – two 
economically developed  countries with high levels of education overall. And 
low 
levels of attainment  among Hindus reflect the fact that 98% of Hindu 
adults live in the developing  countries of India, Nepal and Bangladesh. 
But  there also are important differences in educational attainment among 
religious  groups living in the same region, and even the same country. In 
sub-Saharan  Africa, for example, Christians generally have higher average 
levels of  education than Muslims. Some social scientists have attributed this 
gap  primarily to historical factors, including missionary activity during 
colonial  times. (For more on theories about religion’s impact on educational 
attainment,  see Chapter 7.) 
Drawing  on census and survey data from 151 countries, the study also finds 
large gender  gaps in educational attainment within some major world 
religions. For example,  Muslim women around the globe have an average of 4.9 
years of schooling,  compared with 6.4 years among Muslim men. And formal 
education is especially low  among Hindu women, who have 4.2 years of schooling 
on 
average, compared with 6.9  years among Hindu men. 
Yet  many of these disparities appear to be decreasing over time, as the 
religious  groups with the lowest average levels of education – Muslims and 
Hindus – have  made the biggest educational gains in recent generations, and 
as the gender gaps  within some religions have diminished, according to Pew Re
search Center’s  analysis. 
At  present, Jewish adults (ages 25 and older) have a global average of 13 
years of  formal schooling, compared with approximately nine years among 
Christians, eight  years among Buddhists and six years among Muslims and 
Hindus. Religiously  unaffiliated adults – those who describe their religion as 
atheist, agnostic or  “nothing in particular” – have spent an average of nine 
years in school, a  little less than Christian adults worldwide.1 
But  the number of years of schooling received by the average adult in all 
the  religious groups studied has been rising in recent decades, with the 
greatest  overall gains made by the groups that had lagged furthest behind. 
For  instance, the youngest Hindu adults in the study (those born between 
1976 and  1985) have spent an average of 7.1 years in school, nearly double 
the amount of  schooling received by the oldest Hindus in the study (those 
born between 1936  and 1955). The youngest Muslims have made similar gains, 
receiving approximately  three more years of schooling, on average, than their 
counterparts born a few  decades earlier, as have the youngest Buddhists, 
who acquired 2.5 more years of  schooling. 
Over  the same time frame, by contrast, Christians gained an average of 
just one more  year of schooling, and Jews recorded an average gain of less 
than half a year of  additional schooling. 
Meanwhile,  the youngest generation of religiously unaffiliated adults – 
sometimes called  religious “nones” – in the study has gained so much ground 
(2.9 more years of  schooling than the oldest generation of religious “nones”
 analyzed) that it has  surpassed Christians in average number of years of 
schooling worldwide (10.3  years among the youngest unaffiliated adults vs. 
9.9 years among the youngest  Christians). 
Gender  gaps also are narrowing somewhat. In the oldest generation, across 
all the major  religious groups, men received more years of schooling, on 
average, than women.  But the youngest generations of Christian, Buddhist and 
unaffiliated women have  achieved parity with their male counterparts in 
average years of schooling. And  among the youngest Jewish adults, Jewish women 
have spent nearly one more year  in school, on average, than Jewish men. 
These  are among the key findings of Pew Research Center’s new demographic 
study. A  prior study by researchers at an Austrian institute, the 
Wittgenstein Centre for  Demography and Human Capital, looked at differences in 
educational attainment by  age and gender.2 The new study is the first 
comprehensive examination of  differences in educational levels by religion. 
Wittgenstein Centre researchers  Michaela Potančoková and Marcin Stonawski 
collaborated with Pew Research Center  researchers to compile and standardize 
this 
data. 
Religions  vary in educational attainment
About  one-in-five adults globally – but twice as many Muslims and Hindus –
 have  received no schooling at all
 
Despite  recent gains by young adults, formal schooling is neither 
universal nor equal  around the world. The global norm is barely more than a 
primary 
education – an  average of about eight years of formal schooling for men 
and seven years for  women. 
At  the high end of the spectrum, 14% of adults ages 25 and older 
(including 15% of  men and 13% of women) have a university degree or some other 
kind 
of higher  education, such as advanced vocational training after high 
school. But an even  larger percentage – about one-in-five adults (19%) 
worldwide, 
or more than 680  million people – have no formal schooling at all. 
Education  levels vary a great deal by religion. About four-in-ten Hindus 
(41%) and more  than one-third of Muslims (36%) in the study have no formal 
schooling. In other  religious groups, the shares without any schooling range 
from 10% of Buddhists  to 1% of Jews, while a majority of Jewish adults 
(61%) have post-secondary  degrees.3 
Hindus  and Muslims have made big advances in educational attainment
 
The  study finds the religious groups with the lowest levels of education 
are also  the ones that have made the biggest gains in educational attainment 
in recent  decades. 
Over  three recent generations, the share of Hindus with at least some 
formal  schooling rose by 28 percentage points, from 43% among the oldest 
Hindus 
in the  study to 71% among the youngest. Muslims, meanwhile, registered a 
25-point  increase, from 46% among the oldest Muslims to 72% among the 
youngest. 
Christians,  Buddhists and religious “nones” have made more modest gains 
in basic education,  but they started from a higher base. Among the oldest 
generation in the study,  large majorities of these three religious groups 
received at least some formal  education; among the youngest Christians, 
Buddhists and religious “nones,” more  than nine-in-ten have received at least 
some schooling. 
The  share of Jews with at least some schooling has remained virtually 
universal  across generations at 99%. 
Declining  gender gaps in formal education
 
In  this study, more women than men have no formal education: As of 2010, 
an  estimated 432 million women (23% of all women ages 25 and older) and 250 
million  men (14% of all men) lacked any formal education. 
In  some religious groups, the gender gaps in acquiring any formal 
education are  particularly large. For example, just over half of Hindu women 
(53%) 
have  received no formal schooling, compared with 29% of Hindu men, a 
difference of 24  percentage points. Among Muslims worldwide, 43% of women and 
30% 
of men have no  formal schooling, a 13-point gap. In other religions, the 
gender differences in  the shares with no formal schooling are smaller, 
ranging from 9 points among the  religiously unaffiliated to just 1 point among 
Jews. 
But  Hindus have substantially narrowed the gender gap in primary 
schooling, as  shares of Hindu women with no formal schooling decreased across 
the 
three  generations studied. Among the oldest Hindus, 72% of women and 41% of 
men have  no formal schooling. But among the youngest Hindus in the study, 
the gender gap  is smaller, as 38% of women and 20% of men have no formal 
schooling. 
Muslims  also have reduced the gender gap across generations by 11 
percentage points. But  in the youngest generation, a 10-point difference 
remains: 
33% of Muslim women  and 23% of Muslim men have no formal schooling. Among 
religiously unaffiliated  adults and Buddhists worldwide, meanwhile, the 
gender gap in the shares with no  formal schooling has virtually disappeared. 
Reversal  of some gender gaps in higher education
 
Worldwide,  among all adults in the study, slightly more men than women 
hold post-secondary  degrees (15% vs. 13%). But across generations, women have 
been outpacing men in  reaching higher levels of education. As a result, in 
the youngest generation,  the share of women with post-secondary degrees is 
comparable to the share of men  (17% each). 
In  the youngest generation of three faith groups – Jews, Christians and 
the  religiously unaffiliated – the gender gap in higher education has 
actually  reversed. The biggest reversal has happened among Jews. Among the 
oldest  
generation of Jews, more men (66%) than women (59%) hold post-secondary 
degrees.  But among the youngest Jewish adults worldwide, 69% of women and 57% 
of men have  such degrees. In other words, a 7-point gender gap in the 
oldest generation  (with more men than women holding advanced degrees) is now a 
12-point gender gap  in the other direction, with more women than men in the 
youngest generation of  Jews holding degrees. (See Chapter 6 for details.) 
Christians  and religiously unaffiliated people have experienced similar – 
although not as  dramatic – reversals of the gender gap in post-secondary 
education. Among  Christians, the gender gap among those in the oldest adult 
cohort – 21% of men  with higher education vs. 17% of women – has flipped 
among the youngest so that  more women than men now hold degrees (25% of women 
vs. 20% of men). Similarly,  among religiously unaffiliated people, the 
3-point gender gap in the oldest  generation (with more men than women having 
higher education) is now a 3-point  gap in the other direction in the 
youngest generation, with more women than men  earning post-secondary degrees. 
Meanwhile,  the gender gap in higher education has narrowed for Buddhists 
(by 5 points) and  Muslims (by 3 points). Among the youngest generations in 
those groups, roughly  equal shares of women and men hold higher degrees – 
19% each among Buddhists and  11% and 9% among Muslim men and women, 
respectively. The gender gap in  post-secondary education among Hindus has held 
steady across generations. In the  youngest cohort of Hindus, more men than 
women 
still have post-secondary degrees  (17% of men vs. 11% of women). 
Both  religion and region matter for educational attainment
 
Within  the world’s major religious groups, there are often large 
variations in  educational attainment depending on the country or region of the 
world 
in which  adherents live. Muslims in Europe, for example, have more years 
of schooling, on  average, than Muslims in the Middle East. This is because 
education levels are  affected by many factors other than religion, including 
socioeconomic  conditions, government resources and migration policies, the 
presence or absence  of armed conflict and the prevalence of child labor 
and marriage. 
At  the same time, this study finds that even under the same regional or 
national  conditions, there often are differences in education attainment 
among those  within religious groups. Here are some findings from this report 
that illustrate  both the diversity within the same religious group across 
different regions of  the world, and the diversity within the same region among 
religious groups: 
    *   There  is a large and pervasive gap in educational attainment 
between Muslims and  Christians in sub-Saharan Africa. By all attainment 
measures, Muslim adults in  the region – both women and men – are far less 
educated 
than their Christian  counterparts. For instance, Muslims are more than 
twice as likely as  Christians in sub-Saharan Africa to have no formal 
schooling (65% vs. 30%).  Moreover, despite growth in the share of adults with 
any 
formal schooling in  recent decades, the Muslim-Christian attainment gap has 
widened across  generations, largely because Muslims have not kept pace with 
educational gains  made by Christians. (See Chapter 1 for more on the 
Muslim-Christian gap in  sub-Saharan Africa, and Chapter 7 for a discussion of 
possible  explanations.) 
    *   Also  in sub-Saharan Africa, the Muslim gender gap in education has 
remained largely  unchanged across generations – and even widened slightly 
by some measures of  attainment analyzed in this study. Although the 
youngest Muslim women in this  region are making educational gains compared 
with 
their elders, they are  making them at a slightly slower rate than their male 
peers. This pattern  differs from some other regions, where Muslim women are 
generally making  educational gains at a faster pace than Muslim men, thus 
narrowing the gender  gap. (See Chapter 1 for details.) 
    *       *   Christians  have remained fairly stable at the global level 
in their overall educational  attainment over three generations. But their 
attainment varies considerably by  region. As the largest of the world’s 
major religious groups (numbering about  2.2 billion overall, including 
children, as of 2010), Christians also are the  most widely dispersed faith 
group, 
with hundreds of millions of adherents in  sub-Saharan Africa, the 
Asia-Pacific, Europe, North America and Latin America  and the Caribbean. 
Christians 
in Europe and North America tend to be much more  highly educated than those 
in sub-Saharan Africa, for instance, although  African Christians are 
making rapid educational gains across generations. (See  Chapter 2 for more 
detail on educational attainment among Christians.) 
    *   Jews  also have remained stable in their already high levels of 
educational  attainment over recent generations. But Jews, unlike Christians, 
are a much  smaller and more localized population, with a large majority of 
all Jews  worldwide living in just two countries – Israel and the United 
States – where  educational attainment is relatively high overall. (Chapter 6 
explores data on  Jews in more detail.) 
    *       *   At  the global level, religiously unaffiliated adults have 
1.3 more years of  schooling, on average, than religiously affiliated adults 
(8.8 versus 7.5).  One possible reason for this is that unaffiliated people 
are  disproportionately concentrated in countries with relatively high 
overall  levels of educational attainment, while the religiously affiliated are 
more  dispersed across countries with both high and low levels of 
attainment.  However, the unaffiliated are not consistently better educated 
than their 
 religiously affiliated compatriots when looked at country by country. In 
the  76 countries with data available on the youngest generation of 
unaffiliated  adults (born 1976-1985), they have a similar number of years of 
schooling as  their religiously affiliated peers in 33 countries; they are less 
educated in  27 countries, and they are more highly educated than the 
affiliated in 16  countries. (See sidebar in Chapter 3 for more details on the 
unaffiliated and  secularization theory.) 
    *       *   Hindus  in India, who make up a large majority of the 
country’s population (and more  than 90% of the world’s Hindus), have 
relatively 
low levels of educational  attainment – a nationwide average of 5.5 years 
of schooling. While they are  more highly educated than Muslims in India (14% 
of the country’s population),  they lag behind Christians (2.5% of India’s 
population). By contrast, fully  87% of Hindus living in North America hold 
post-secondary degrees – a higher  share than any other major religious 
group in the region. (See Chapter 5 on  Hindu educational attainment.) 
    *       *   Religious  minorities often have more education, on 
average, than a country’s majority  religious group, particularly when the 
minority 
group is largely foreign born  and comes from a distant country. In these 
cases, immigrants often were  explicitly selected under immigration policies 
that favor highly skilled  applicants. In addition, it is often the 
well-educated who manage to overcome  the financial and logistical challenges 
faced 
by those who wish to leave their  homeland for a new, far-off country. For i
nstance, in the U.S., where  Christians make up the majority of the adult 
population, Hindus and Muslims  are much more likely than Christians to have 
post-secondary degrees. And  unlike Christians, large majorities of Hindus 
and Muslims were born outside  the United States (87% of Hindus and 64% of 
Muslims compared with 14% of  Christians, according to a 2014 Pew Research 
Center survey). 4 
    *       *   
A  note about this analysis
 
This  report looks at average educational levels among adherents of five 
major world  religions – Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism and Judaism –
 as well as  among the religiously unaffiliated. 
Educational  systems vary enormously around the world; this report does not 
attempt to  analyze differences in educational quality, but focuses 
primarily on educational  attainment in terms of number of years of schooling. 
It 
distinguishes among four  broad levels of educational attainment: no formal 
schooling (less than one year  of primary school), primary education 
(completion of at least one grade of  primary school), some secondary education 
(but 
no degree beyond high school) and  post-secondary education (completion of 
some kind of college, university or  vocational degree beyond high school, 
also referred to in this report as “higher  education”). For comparability 
across countries, these educational categories  are based on the 
International Standard Classification of Education (ISCED 1997;  see 
Methodology for 
more details). 
To  measure changes over recent generations, the report looks at three 
birth  cohorts: the “oldest” (born 1936-1955), “middle” (born 1956-1975) and “
youngest”  (born 1976-1985). These generations roughly correspond, 
respectively, to people  ages 55 to 74, 35 to 54 and 25 to 34 as of 2010, the 
most 
recent year for which  detailed census data are available in many countries. 
Whenever this report  refers to “adults,” it means people who were 25 or 
older in 2010 (or, in some  cases, the most recent year for which data are 
available). 
The  report presents figures at the global and regional levels but also 
includes  select country-level data as illustrations of larger trends. It 
includes data  from 151 countries, collectively representing 95% of the 3.6 
billion people  around the world who were 25 or older in 2010. Analyses of 
change 
across  generations include data from 130 countries with available data on 
all three  birth cohorts, representing 87% of the world’s population in 2010 
ages 25 to  74. 
The  approach in this report is primarily descriptive: It lays out the 
differences in  educational levels among religious groups without attempting to 
explain the  reasons for those differences. Chapter 7 outlines some of the 
ways that social  scientists think religion may influence educational 
attainment. 
In  this study, the world is divided into six regions. It includes data 
from 35  countries in the Asia-Pacific region; 36 countries in Europe, 
including Russia;  30 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean, including 
Central America and  Mexico; 12 countries in the Middle East-North Africa 
region; 
Canada and the  United States in North America; and 36 countries in 
sub-Saharan  Africa.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to