| Children's
future economic status and productivity in the
workforce are determined in part by their
performance in school. Research has shown that
children and adolescents who are highly engaged
in school perform better in terms of test scores,
attendance, and advancement from grade to grade.
Studies also indicate that low-income children
are less successful in school than children from
families with higher incomes. Changes in welfare are likely to
prompt changes in the lives of low-income
children that may affect their engagement in
school. Children whose parents obtain stable
employment may be better able to focus on
schoolwork. Knowing that they need to work as
adults, these children may become more engaged in
the learning process. Conversely, children whose
parents end up in unstable, low-paying jobs with
shifting work schedules may find it harder to
become engaged in the educational process.
To assess school
engagement, parents were asked about the extent
to which their children did schoolwork only when
forced to, did just enough schoolwork to get by,
always did homework, and cared about doing well
in school. The responses to these four questions
were combined to generate a measure of school
engagement.
Nationally, 41 percent of
all children were described as being highly
engaged in school. In low-income families (below
200 percent of the poverty level), 34 percent of
children were highly engaged, compared to 45
percent of children in higher-income families, a
statistically significant difference.
Differences in engagement
by family income were evident in young children
and in adolescents. Of children age 6 to 11, 38
percent in low-income and 47 percent in
higher-income families were highly engaged. This
gap widened somewhat for children between the
ages of 12 and 17, with 30 percent and 44
percent, respectively, being highly engaged.
In the 13 states surveyed,
35 percent to 43 percent of all children were
highly engaged in school. None of the states was
above the national average, but four were below
it: Alabama, California, Colorado, and
Mississippi.
Among children from
low-income families, 28 percent to 38 percent
were highly engaged in school. Texas was above
the national average; Alabama and Mississippi
were below it.
For children age 6 to 11 in
low-income families, 29 percent to 40 percent
were highly engaged in school. None of the states
surveyed was above the national average of 38
percent, but Alabama, California, Massachusetts,
and Mississippi were below it.
Among 12- to 17-year-olds
in low-income families, those highly engaged in
school ranged from 26 percent to 37 percent. In
Texas, the percentage was above the national
average of 30 percent, but none of the states
dropped below the national average.
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