![]() |
Research in brief: reading well and being able to do maths at a
young age could determine a higher wage later in life.
Photograph: Alamy
|
It may seem hard to
figure, but provocative new research suggests that an individual's math and
reading skills in elementary school are key indicators of his/her socioeconomic
status (SES) in adulthood.
In fact, the study
-conducted by a pair of researchers at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland-
showed that math and reading skills at age 7 are the most reliable predictors
of SES at age 42.
Study co-author Stuart
Ritchie, a doctoral student at the university, told The Huffington Post in an
email that he was surprised by the findings.
“A lot of psychologists
-including us before we did the study!- would have guessed that, since general
intelligence is so important, specific skills like reading and math wouldn't
have any extra effects on SES beyond it,” Ritchie wrote. “But we found that
these effects do exist- so no matter how smart people were … being better at
reading and math at age seven was still significantly linked to SES aged 42.”
Timothy Bates, a
professor at the university and the study's co-author, said the study
highlights the importance of learned skills.
“There was no flattening off of the return to
these skills at either end: So it is of value all the way from remedial intervention
to the most gifted levels to raise these skills,” Bates said in an email to The
Huffington Post. “Math and reading are two of the most intervention-friendly of
topics: Practice improves nearly all children.”
The study followed
17,638 English, Scottish, and Welsh participants, and 920 immigrants, from
birth until age 50. Data was collected at several points during the
participants' lives, including at ages 7, 11, 16, and 42.
When participants were
7, researchers gauged their family’s socioeconomic background, as well as their
reading and math skills. At age 11, researchers measured participants’ IQ, and
at age 16, their academic motivation. When participants were 42, researchers
measured their educational duration (how long they had attended school) and
their SES- how much money they made.
The study, “Enduring
Links From Childhood Mathematics and Reading Achievement to Adult Socioeconomic
Status,” was published in the May 2013 issue of the journal Psychological
Science.
Source: huffingtonpost.com/Rebecca
Klein
No comments:
Post a Comment