tm confidential and proprietary. copyright © 2007 by educational testing service. 1
TRANSCRIPT
Confidential and Proprietary. Copyright © 2007 by Educational Testing Service.
2TM
The family is a child’s first and smallest school -- parents are the first teachers
How well children perform in school depends on where they start.
Many homes are under-resourced and ill-equipped as first schools.
Parents often need help in understanding the connection between what happens in the home and in school.
Helping all children achieve requires that educational deficiencies in the home be addressed.
Confidential and Proprietary. Copyright © 2007 by Educational Testing Service.
3TM
Three Important Caveats in Considering the Family as an Educational Institution
Improving the family as an educational institution is not a substitute for national/state educational improvement and accountability efforts. We must do both.
Better equipped families can be important allies to teachers and schools in their efforts to improve achievement and close the achievement gap.
The family is our most private institution and this privacy must be respected in any efforts that are made.
Confidential and Proprietary. Copyright © 2007 by Educational Testing Service.
4TM
Study Examined 16 Family Indicators -- This Presentation Provides Data on 7
• The parent/pupil ratio
• Early language and literacy development
• Reading to children
• Child care – type and quality
• Home learning environment
• Family resources
• Linking it all to achievement
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5TM
Raising Children is Best Done in the Two-parent Family (“Parent – Pupil Ratio”)
Children in father-absent families are significantly more likely to:
• Have lower academic achievement
• Develop behavioral and psychological problems
• Use illegal substances and have early contact with police
• Have sexual relations at an earlier age
• Have poor physical and psychological health
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6TM
“Parent-Pupil” Ratio is in Decline – a Development Unfavorable to Raising Educational Achievement
Just over one in three Black children live with both parents, well below the national average.
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7TM
Differences in Children in Single-parent Families Correlate with State Academic Achievement
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8TM
Raising Children in One-parent Families is an Increasing Trend in the Developed World
The United States has the highest percentage of single parent families in comparison to 10 other advanced economic countries.
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9TM
Large Differences Exist Among Families in Early Language Acquisition and Literacy DevelopmentThese are critical to cognitive development and school achievement
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10TM
Reading to Children is Related to Parents’ Socioeconomic Status
Research has established that reading to young children is related to their literacy development and subsequent success in school.
Significant socioeconomic and geographic differences:
• 62% of high-SES kindergartners read to every day
• 36% of low-SES kindergartners read to every day
• Large differences across states, ranging from 68% in VT to 38% in MS
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11TM
Our Unequal Child Care System May Be Reinforcing and Perpetuating Achievement Gaps
Child care is the larger family in which many children spend many “unequal” hours.
Throughout the country child care availability is limited and its quality uneven.
Black children are most likely to be in some type of day care (63%), compared to about 40% of other groups.
Many children, particularly poor and minority children, are in low-quality care.
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13TM
Educational Achievement is Related to a Three Legged Stool of the Home’s Learning Environment
• How the home is equipped for study
• How parents set and enforce rules
• How parents interact with their child’s school
and teachers
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14TM
Some Disturbing Deficiencies in the Family School House Environment
• 25% of U.S. parents reported not having books, magazines, and newspapers available in the home -- these encourage learning.
• While about 50% of White students use the Internet at home, only about 25% of Black and Hispanic students do so -- the digital divide exists.
•While 24% of 8th graders watch 4 or more hours of TV on an average weekday, almost 60% of Black students do so -- this is excessive TV watching.
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15TM
Some Disturbing Deficiencies in the Family School House Environment (continued)
• One in five 8th graders misses 3 or more days of school each month
• The trend in parent participation is up, but is lower as students get older and for students with lower grades
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16TM
Some Aspects of the Smallest School Require Resources Beyond the Reach of Some Families
There are large differences in the funding of America’s smallest school that have important consequences
Median Family Income, 2005
Asian American $68,957
White, not Hispanic 63,156
ALL 56,194
Hispanic 37,867
Black 35,464
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17TM
Low Income is Concentrated in Minority Families Leading to Hungry Rather than Motivated Early Learners
Female-headed families are much more likely to be “food insecure” than married-couple families.
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18TM
Four Proxies Selected for Demonstrating Impact on Student Achievement
Four family factors (out of the 16 covered in the report) were selected to determine how much they would, in combination, be associated with a measure of achievement.
• One parent families (demographic)• Absenteeism – missing three days or more per month
(student)• Reading to young children (parent)• Excessive TV watching (distraction)
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19TM
Statistically 4 Factors Account for 2/3 of Reading Score Differences -- Very Strong Association
• A very strong association:– In 38 states, the predicted score was within 4 points of the
actual score (on a scale of 0 to 500)– While this type of analysis has limitations – it demonstrates
that there is a strong relationship
• A note of CAUTION: • does not mean that these factors have more influence than school factors --- both are interrelated. E.g., areas with low-income families may pay less in taxes, and these schools are more likely to have less qualified teachers.
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20TM
The family is a child’s first and smallest school -- parents are the first teachers.
Raising achievement and closing gaps require that policy be focused on the starting line, as well as the finish line.
How much children advance in school depends considerably on where they start. We cannot depend only on teachers and schools to be the equalizers.
A disproportionate number of American homes are under-resourced and ill-equipped as first schools.
Many parents need help in understanding the connection between what they do at home and how well their children are prepared to succeed in school.