Wednesday, March 14, 2012

3rd Grade Reading Levels, Poverty and Graduation Rates


In a study from 2011, researchers found that students who are not reading proficiently by the critical 3rd grade milestone are 4 times less likely to graduate than students who are better readers. According to this study, if a child is not proficient in reading AND is “poor”, that child is 13 times less likely to graduate than their more affluent and proficient peers.  For the purposes of this study, ”poor”  is defined  by tracts of the U.S. Census  where more than 30 percent of households have incomes below the federal poverty threshold, or $22,314 a year for a family of four in 2010.

 As if that’s not bad enough, as an expansion to this study, researchers have now added a 3rd component to the equation.  If a child is not a proficient reader by the 3rd grade, is economically disadvantaged AND comes from a ”poor” neighborhood, they are 17 times less likely to graduate then their peers without these disadvantages.

It may seem obvious, but if we take a closer look we can see why living in a high poverty neighborhood plays such a large role in determining student’s success. We know that children who come from these neighborhoods often lack access to good health care, move frequently in and out of substandard housing units and go without proper nutrition and sleep. In addition to these factors, they must contend with street crime, limited public transportation and substandard schools.

Researchers are in agreement:  if we want kids to break the cycle of poverty and graduate from high school, we MUST be sure that they are reading on grade level by the 3rd grade.  More than 160 cities are working with the ‘Campaign for Grade –Level  Reading’  with plans to address the problems of poverty and to increase the number of children who are reading on grade level.  As part of the ‘All-America City Grade-Level Reading Network’ cities are creating plans of action that will tackle the 3 most critical problems that keep kids from reading on grade level; school attendance, school readiness and summer learning.

"Neighborhoods matter," said Donald J. Hernandez, a Hunter College sociology professor who conducted the research. "We need to think about effective policies that reduce poverty and increase reading skills for all children, including strategies that align early education with grades K-3rd and workforce development for parents that lead to secure jobs with middle-class incomes for families. Such policies would not only help individual children and families, but also reduce neighborhood poverty rates and, hence, the toxic effects of concentrated poverty."
For more information on the about this research please visit The Annie E. Casey Foundation at www.aecf.org. For more information about the Campaign for Grade-Level Reading and the All-America City Grade-Level Reading Network please visit www.gradelevelreading.net

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