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Educate yourself to boost achievement in kids

by the University of Michigan

El pintor nicaragüense, Raúl Barrios, muestra una de sus obras artísticas pintadas en el tronco de arbol: a El Reportero en la ciudad de Managua. (photo by Marvin Ramirez)Nicaraguan painter Raúl Barrios, shows to El Reportero one of his paintings made on the trunk of a tree in the city of Managua. (photo by Marvin Ramirez)

ANN ARBOR, Michigan.— With school days just around the corner, a University of Michigan researcher has some advice for parents who want to increase their children’s academic success.

“If you want your kids to do well in school, then the amount of education you get yourself is important,” says Pamela Davis-Kean, a psychologist at the U-M Institute for Social Research (ISR). “This may mean that parents need to go back to school.”

“A growing number of large-scale, long-term studies now show that increasing parental education beyond high school is strongly linked to increasing language ability in children. Even after controlling for parental income, marital status, and a host of other factors, we find that the impact of parental education remains significant.”

Davis-Kean, who is also affiliated with the U-M Psychology Department, directs the ISR Center for the Analysis of Pathways from Childhood to Adulthood, funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF). She is co-editor of the July 2009 issue of the Merrill-Palmer Quarterly, a peer-reviewed journal presenting research sponsored by the Center that employs multiple perspectives to analyze the impact parents have on their children’s educational attainment.

One of the studies in the special issue examines the long-term effects of parental education on children’s success in school and work, beginning when children are eight years old and extending until they are age 48.

Another study examines how language skills and school readiness of three-year-olds are positively affected when mothers return to school.

“In every case, we’ve found that an increase in parental education has a positive impact on children’s success in school,” says Davis-Kean. “And this impact is particularly strong when parents start with a high-school education or less.”

“These findings may be reassuring to parents at a time when many are unemployed or worried about future job prospects,” Davis-Kean says. “They clearly show that in terms of the effect on children’s achievement, it’s more important for parents to get a good education than to get a high-paying job. Of course, the more education you have, the more likely it is that you’ll find a good job, so an increase in education is often leads to an increase in income.”

The reasons behind the power of parental education are not yet fully understood, but researchers think it’s more than just providing a model that children want to imitate. More education might mean that parents are more likely to read to their children, suggests Davis Kean. Or it could be that parents who are in school need to be more organized in order to get everything done, so they tend to create a more structured home environment, with dinner and bed-time occurring at regular times, for example. This kind of predictable, structured environment has a positive impact on child development, many studies have shown.

Creating a more structured environment for children – as opposed to giving them lots of free time – has been getting something of a bad reputation lately, Davis-Kean notes. But she believes that for the vast majority of U.S. children, the value of free time has been exaggerated.

“There’s this idealistic, nostalgic idea that free time gives children a chance to go out and play, and just experience nature,” she says. “But in reality, in today’s world where both parents are likely to be employed outside the home, what free time means for most kids is sitting in front of the TV, playing video games, and generally being bored with no stimulation.

“What’s really valuable for children is being engaged in activities that are supervised by adults. When kids are unsupervised, you see an increase in injuries. And ­summer down-time also has negative infl uences on school achievement in the fall.”

So parents who are going to school themselves should not worry about the effects of arranging more supervised activities for their children, according to Davis-Kean.

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