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Improving Educational Outcomes for Families

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A mother鈥檚 level of educational attainment has important implications for her children鈥檚 economic well-being, education, and health, says a new Foundation for Child Development by Donald Hernandez and Jeffrey Napierala. Their findings reaffirm previous , suggesting that less maternal education is associated with higher levels of poverty, child obesity, and infant mortality, and lower levels of preschool enrollment and academic proficiency for children.

Though levels of parental education have , approximately one in eight children are still raised by a mother without a high school diploma. The relationship between educational achievement and poverty is well-documented. According to the report, more than 80 percent of children whose mothers did not graduate high school are living in poverty. The instability and that come with poverty have serious implications for children, which are often revealed in their education outcomes.

As the graph displays, less than 40 percent of children whose mothers didn鈥檛 graduate high school are enrolled in pre-K. The have shown to be especially effective on children from low-income families. When limited early learning opportunities are coupled with the effects of economic instability, it doesn鈥檛 come as a surprise that this group of children does not do as well as their more advantaged peers in later years. Dual gen HS Blog Graphs It鈥檚 clear that children of mothers with low educational achievement are at a disadvantage. While providing high-quality educational opportunities can help children overcome such barriers, helping mothers attain higher levels of education may also help to improve children鈥檚 outcomes. Higher levels of education are associated with gainful employment and greater economic stability. And since most children spend the majority of their time with a parent, a stable home environment is important for reinforcing the benefits of high-quality early education.聽 It isn鈥檛 possible to determine causation in this case, but the strong correlation depicted in the graph between parental education and children鈥檚 proficiency suggests that educating parents could improve children鈥檚 academic outcomes.

Dual-generation interventions simultaneously address the needs of parents and children, and may be an effective way to increase disadvantaged families鈥 economic security and break the intergenerational cycle of poverty. The authors suggest such strategies include three components: high-quality early education, job training that leads to a relevant credential, and wrap-around services.

First, Hernandez and Naperiala recommend a PreK-3rd grade approach to early education, providing children with access to high-quality pre-K programs that are followed by strong teaching and learning in kindergarten and early grades. My colleagues offer recommendations for building cohesive PreK-3rd systems in their recent report,聽. One way is to ensure that children have access to pre-K and kindergarten programs that last for as many hours as the regular 1st grade school day, providing sufficient time for high-quality interactions between children and educators.

Second, the authors explain that effective job training must help parents take concrete steps toward well-paid and in-demand jobs. This may mean earning a credential, participating in an apprenticeship, or enrolling in a bachelor鈥檚 degree program.

The third component is wrap-around services. The authors note that these supports could encompass a variety of things (such as career coaching, transportation, or affordable housing) and should be based on their families鈥 specific needs.

The problem isn鈥檛 necessarily that these services aren鈥檛 available to families, but the lack of coordination between programs with regards to funding and implementation leads to a fragmented, inefficient system that doesn鈥檛 address the intergenerational nature of poverty. By siloing these programs, policymakers are missing the opportunity to have a larger impact.

Hernandez and Napierala suggest, for example, combining early education and job training programs so that mothers and children receive services at the same time. The Washington Post highlighted a charter school in DC that is doing just that.

As programs that aim to serve both parents and children pop up around the country, some policymakers are looking to one of our country鈥檚 oldest dual-generation programs, Head Start, as a model. Also the country鈥檚 largest pre-K, Head Start was designed to support disadvantaged families, and has a specific requirement for parent involvement. As researchers at Head Start鈥檚 12th National Research Conference last month, this parent engagement requirement makes Head Start a strong platform on which to build and experiment with comprehensive dual-generation strategies. The depth of parent involvement varies significantly among Head Start programs. But some providers are making family engagement a strong priority, focusing on more than parenting by providing parents with tools to improve their family鈥檚 well-being.

One promising example is the Community Action Project of Tulsa鈥檚 () CareerAdvance庐 program. It serves hundreds of families in the Tulsa, Oklahoma area, training parents for careers in health care while their children attend Head Start. The program attempts to develop parents鈥 human capital by offering services like career coaching, peer support, academic skills building, and tuition assistance. Parents aren鈥檛 just taking arbitrary courses, they are gaining the skills and credits they need to qualify for in-demand jobs, such as a Certified Nurse Assistant or Pharmacy Technician. Researchers are in the early stages of evaluating the program鈥檚 effectiveness.

Head Start already reaches many of the country鈥檚 most impoverished children and provides them with early education and comprehensive services. Using Head Start as a vehicle to reach parents and increase their educational attainment is a logical next step to enhance family well-being. As Hernandez and Naperiala explain, dual-generation programs 鈥渃an act in a mutually reinforcing or synergistic fashion that does not occur in programs focused only on children or only on mothers.鈥

Here, at 国产视频, we will be looking more closely at strategies like those discussed above. With our new , we鈥檒l be assessing current conditions, exploring promising family-centered strategies, and proposing forward-looking reforms to strengthen family well-being.

More 国产视频 the Authors

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Abbie Lieberman

Senior Policy Analyst, Early & Elementary Education

Improving Educational Outcomes for Families