My research suggests that one part of the explanation for this is rising income inequality. As you may have heard, the incomes of the rich have grown faster over the last 30 years than the incomes of the middle class and the poor. Money helps families provide cognitively stimulating experiences for their young children because it provides more stable home environments, more time for parents to read to their children, access to higher-quality child care and preschool and — in places like New York City, where 4-year-old children take tests to determine entry into gifted and talented programs — access to preschool test preparation tutors or the time to serve as tutors themselves.
No Rich Child Left Behind
By SEAN F. REARDONThe New York Times April 27, 2013
High-income families are increasingly focusing their resources — their money, time and knowledge of what it takes to be successful in school — on their children’s cognitive development and educational success. They are doing this because educational success is much more important than it used to be, even for the rich.
Here’s a fact that may not surprise you: the children of the rich
perform better in school, on average, than children from middle-class or
poor families. Students growing up in richer families have better
grades and higher standardized test scores, on average, than poorer
students; they also have higher rates of participation in
extracurricular activities and school leadership positions, higher
graduation rates and higher rates of college enrollment and completion.
Whether you think it deeply unjust, lamentable but inevitable, or
obvious and unproblematic, this is hardly news. It is true in most
societies and has been true in the United States for at least as long as
we have thought to ask the question and had sufficient data to verify
the answer.
The more we do to ensure that all children have similar cognitively stimulating early childhood experiences, the less we will have to worry about failing schools. This in turn will enable us to let our schools focus on teaching the skills — how to solve complex problems, how to think critically and how to collaborate — essential to a growing economy and a lively democracy.
What is news is that in the United States over the last few decades
these differences in educational success between high- and lower-income
students have grown substantially.
One way to see this is to look at the scores of rich and poor
students on standardized math and reading tests over the last 50 years.
When I did this using information from a dozen large national studies
conducted between 1960 and 2010, I found that the rich-poor gap in test
scores is about 40 percent larger now than it was 30 years ago.
To make this trend concrete, consider two children, one from a family
with income of $165,000 and one from a family with income of $15,000.
These incomes are at the 90th and 10th percentiles of the income
distribution nationally, meaning that 10 percent of children today grow
up in families with incomes below $15,000 and 10 percent grow up in
families with incomes above $165,000.
The same pattern is evident in other, more tangible, measures of
educational success, like college completion. In a study similar to
mine, Martha J. Bailey and Susan M. Dynarski, economists at the
University of Michigan, found that the proportion of students from
upper-income families who earn a bachelor’s degree has increased by 18
percentage points over a 20-year period, while the completion rate of
poor students has grown by only 4 points.
In a more recent study, my graduate students and I found that 15
percent of high-income students from the high school class of 2004
enrolled in a highly selective college or university, while fewer than 5
percent of middle-income and 2 percent of low-income students did.
These widening disparities are not confined to academic outcomes: new
research by the Harvard political scientist Robert D. Putnam and his
colleagues shows that the rich-poor gaps in student participation in
sports, extracurricular activities, volunteer work and church attendance
have grown sharply as well.
In San Francisco this week, more than 14,000 educators and education scholars have gathered for the annual meeting of the American Educational Research Association. The theme this year is familiar: Can schools provide children a way out of poverty?
We are still talking about this despite decades of clucking about the
crisis in American education and wave after wave of school
reform.Whatever we’ve been doing in our schools, it hasn’t reduced
educational inequality between children from upper- and lower-income
families.
Part of knowing what we should do about this is understanding how and
why these educational disparities are growing. For the past few years,
alongside other scholars, I have been digging into historical data to
understand just that. The results of this research don’t always match
received wisdom or playground folklore.
The most potent development over the past three decades is that the
test scores of children from high-income families have increased very
rapidly. Before 1980, affluent students had little advantage over
middle-class students in academic performance; most of the socioeconomic
disparity in academics was between the middle class and the poor. But
the rich now outperform the middle class by as much as the middle class
outperform the poor. Just as the incomes of the affluent have grown much
more rapidly than those of the middle class over the last few decades,
so, too, have most of the gains in educational success accrued to the
children of the rich.
Before we can figure out what’s happening here, let’s dispel a few myths.
The income gap in academic achievement is not growing because the
test scores of poor students are dropping or because our schools are in
decline. In fact, average test scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress,
the so-called Nation’s Report Card, have been rising — substantially in
math and very slowly in reading — since the 1970s. The average
9-year-old today has math skills equal to those her parents had at age
11, a two-year improvement in a single generation. The gains are not as
large in reading and they are not as large for older students, but there
is no evidence that average test scores have declined over the last
three decades for any age or economic group.
The widening income disparity in academic achievement is not a result
of widening racial gaps in achievement, either. The achievement gaps
between blacks and whites, and Hispanic and non-Hispanic whites have
been narrowing slowly over the last two decades, trends that actually
keep the yawning gap between higher- and lower-income students from
getting even wider. If we look at the test scores of white students
only, we find the same growing gap between high- and low-income children
as we see in the population as a whole.
It may seem counterintuitive, but schools don’t seem to produce much
of the disparity in test scores between high- and low-income students.
We know this because children from rich and poor families score very
differently on school readiness tests when they enter kindergarten, and
this gap grows by less than 10 percent between kindergarten and high
school. There is some evidence that achievement gaps between high- and
low-income students actually narrow during the nine-month school year,
but they widen again in the summer months.
That isn’t to say that there aren’t important differences in quality
between schools serving low- and high-income students — there certainly
are — but they appear to do less to reinforce the trends than
conventional wisdom would have us believe.
If not the usual suspects, what’s going on? It boils down to this:
The academic gap is widening because rich students are increasingly
entering kindergarten much better prepared to succeed in school than
middle-class students. This difference in preparation persists through
elementary and high school.
My research suggests that one part of the explanation for this is
rising income inequality. As you may have heard, the incomes of the rich
have grown faster over the last 30 years than the incomes of the middle
class and the poor. Money helps families provide cognitively
stimulating experiences for their young children because it provides
more stable home environments, more time for parents to read to their
children, access to higher-quality child care and preschool and — in
places like New York City, where 4-year-old children take tests to
determine entry into gifted and talented programs — access to preschool
test preparation tutors or the time to serve as tutors themselves.
But rising income inequality explains, at best, half of the increase
in the rich-poor academic achievement gap. It’s not just that the rich
have more money than they used to, it’s that they are using it
differently. This is where things get really interesting.
High-income families are increasingly focusing their resources —
their money, time and knowledge of what it takes to be successful in
school — on their children’s cognitive development and educational
success. They are doing this because educational success is much more
important than it used to be, even for the rich.
With a college degree insufficient to ensure a high-income job, or
even a job as a barista, parents are now investing more time and money
in their children’s cognitive development from the earliest ages. It may
seem self-evident that parents with more resources are able to invest
more — more of both money and of what Mr. Putnam calls “‘Goodnight Moon’
time” — in their children’s development. But even though middle-class
and poor families are also increasing the time and money they invest in
their children, they are not doing so as quickly or as deeply as the
rich.
The economists Richard J. Murnane and Greg J. Duncan
report that from 1972 to 2006 high-income families increased the amount
they spent on enrichment activities for their children by 150 percent,
while the spending of low-income families grew by 57 percent over the
same time period. Likewise, the amount of time parents spend with their
children has grown twice as fast since 1975 among college-educated
parents as it has among less-educated parents. The economists Garey Ramey and Valerie A. Ramey
of the University of California, San Diego, call this escalation of
early childhood investment “the rug rat race,” a phrase that nicely
captures the growing perception that early childhood experiences are
central to winning a lifelong educational and economic competition.
It’s not clear what we should do about all this. Partly that’s
because much of our public conversation about education is focused on
the wrong culprits: we blame failing schools and the behavior of the
poor for trends that are really the result of deepening income
inequality and the behavior of the rich.
We’re also slow to understand what’s happening, I think, because the
nature of the problem — a growing educational gap between the rich and
the middle class — is unfamiliar. After all, for much of the last 50
years our national conversation about educational inequality has focused
almost exclusively on strategies for reducing inequalities between the
educational successes of the poor and the middle class, and it has
relied on programs aimed at the poor, like Head Start and Title I.
We’ve barely given a thought to what the rich were doing. With the
exception of our continuing discussion about whether the rising costs of
higher education are pricing the middle class out of college, we don’t
have much practice talking about what economists call “upper-tail
inequality” in education, much less success at reducing it.
Meanwhile, not only are the children of the rich doing better in
school than even the children of the middle class, but the changing
economy means that school success is increasingly necessary to future
economic success, a worrisome mutual reinforcement of trends that is
making our society more socially and economically immobile.
We need to start talking about this. Strangely, the rapid growth in
the rich-poor educational gap provides a ray of hope: if the
relationship between family income and educational success can change
this rapidly, then it is not an immutable, inevitable pattern. What
changed once can change again. Policy choices matter more than we have
recently been taught to think.
So how can we move toward a society in which educational success is
not so strongly linked to family background? Maybe we should take a
lesson from the rich and invest much more heavily as a society in our
children’s educational opportunities from the day they are born.
Investments in early-childhood education pay very high societal
dividends. That means investing in developing high-quality child care
and preschool that is available to poor and middle-class children. It
also means recruiting and training a cadre of skilled preschool teachers
and child care providers. These are not new ideas, but we have to stop
talking about how expensive and difficult they are to implement and just
get on with it.
But we need to do much more than expand and improve preschool and
child care. There is a lot of discussion these days about investing in
teachers and “improving teacher quality,” but improving the quality of
our parenting and of our children’s earliest environments may be even
more important. Let’s invest in parents so they can better invest in
their children.
This means finding ways of helping parents become better teachers
themselves. This might include strategies to support working families so
that they can read to their children more often. It also means
expanding programs like the Nurse-Family Partnership that have proved to
be effective at helping single parents educate their children; but we
also need to pay for research to develop new resources for single
parents.
It might also mean greater business and government support for
maternity and paternity leave and day care so that the middle class and
the poor can get some of the educational benefits that the early
academic intervention of the rich provides their children.
Fundamentally, it means rethinking our still-persistent notion that
educational problems should be solved by schools alone.
The more we do to ensure that all children have similar cognitively
stimulating early childhood experiences, the less we will have to worry
about failing schools. This in turn will enable us to let our schools
focus on teaching the skills — how to solve complex problems, how to
think critically and how to collaborate — essential to a growing economy
and a lively democracy.
Sean F. Reardon is a professor of education and sociology at Stanford.
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