Report Says Achievement
Gap Begins Before School
According to a report
released on September 30 by the Economic
Policy Institute (EPI), children from poor families start kindergarten
without the basic skills that other children have to help them learn
math, reading, and other subjects. The
study, Inequality
at the Starting Gate, was conducted by University of Michigan
scholars Valerie Lee and David T. Burkahm, who analyzed a nationwide
U.S. Department
of Education survey of more than 16,000 children about to enter
kindergarten. The authors say that in order to close the achievement
gap, inequalities in school resources must be reduced, so that extensive
efforts can be focused on these disadvantaged children well before they
start school.
Starting Gate
documents the relative lack of pre-school learning and enrichment experienced
by children from families in the lowest fifth of socioeconomic status.
Compared to the their peers from families in the highest fifth, five-year-old
children in poverty owned far fewer books, were much less likely to
have a home computer or to have been taken to a museum or public library,
spent more hours per week watching television, and were far more likely
to have moved around. These socioeconomic factors, along with disparities
in parents' education and occupation, ensure that all children do not
start schools as equals: new kindergartners form the lowest income group
score 60% lower in math and 56% lower in reading than five-year-olds
from the highest group. These socioeconomic disparities disproportionally
affect African-Americans, the study states. While only nine percent
of white kindergartners were in the lowest quintile, one third of African-American
kindergartners were.
The report suggests
policy changes to lesson these initial inequalities. The nation must
refocus and redouble efforts to reach disadvanaged children before they
start school, a press
release from EPI declared. Starting Gate demonstrates that
children who attend center-based child care before kindergarten show
higher achievement, but only 20% of children in the lowest quintile
were likely to have attended, compared to 65% of children in the highest
quintile. Low-income and minority children are also likely to encounter
less outreach to smooth the transition to school. Their first school,
moreover, is likely to be an underfunded one. More resources are needed,
the study concludes, both to provide children with educational opportunities
before kindergarten and to "make serious and sustained efforts
to correct" the fact that those young students who need good schools
the most are among the least likely to get them.
Prepared October
1, 2002
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