Kindergarten Entrance Age

Kindergarten Entrance Age
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 316
Release: 2015
Genre: Birth date effect (Academic achievement)
ISBN:

The purpose of this study was to investigate the issue of whether or not kindergarten entrance age makes a difference in school success. Some parents delay their child's kindergarten entrance. Students whose kindergarten entrance was delayed are one year or more older than peers in the same classroom, which may give them an advantage (through advanced development) or a disadvantage (through delayed exposure to academics). This study fills a gap in the current literature because it used a longitudinal design and examined the difference in scores over time with the consideration over potential covariates. The specific research questions were: Are there academic advantages in delaying a child's kindergarten entrance as evidenced by academic assessments in third grade, fifth grade, and eighth grade after taking potential covariates into account? Secondly, do students whose kindergarten entrance was delayed, exhibit different behaviors in kindergarten after controlling for potential covariates? This study used the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study (ECLS), Kindergarten (K) Class of 1998-1999 dataset to answer the research questions. The ECLS-K is a large-scale and longitudinal dataset providing nationally representative and generalizable data from approximately 16,000 kindergarten students. Analysis of covariance was used to answer the two research questions. The data analysis to answer the first research question examined the change over time in reading, mathematics, and general knowledge assessments administered in grades kindergarten, first, third, fifth, and eighth. The second research question examined change over time in problematic behaviors as reported by the teacher. The results of this study determined that children whose kindergarten entrance was delayed had an initial advantage in kindergarten in reading, mathematics, general knowledge, and they had fewer problematic behaviors. However, the younger students had a significantly steeper slope of learning. The consideration of covariates did not affect the results. The findings of this study have implications regarding delaying a child's kindergarten entrance, policy decisions, teachers' delivery of instruction, and curricular expectations in early childhood classrooms.

The Relationship Between Entrance Age and Academic Achievement in Literacy Skills for Kindergarten Students in a Rural School

The Relationship Between Entrance Age and Academic Achievement in Literacy Skills for Kindergarten Students in a Rural School
Author: Rebecca Ann Brower
Publisher:
Total Pages: 108
Release: 2020
Genre: Academic achievement
ISBN:

Parents and teachers are faced with the difficult question of when to enroll their children in kindergarten to be the most academically successful in a rural area. Some parents have started enrolling children in kindergarten at the age of four, despite not being cognitively ready based on the information-processing theory. The purpose of this study is to determine the relationship between entrance age and the academic achievement of literacy skills for kindergarten students in a rural area. A correlational design was utilized to test the strength and direction of the relationship between two quantitative variables: age and reading achievement in a rural school district. A correlational design was appropriate for this study since in order to measure the degree and direction of the relationship between two or more variables and to explore the magnitude among variables. A scatter plot was used to determine the differences between the predictor variable, age, and criterion variable achievement in reading in a rural school district. The researcher failed to reject the null hypothesis. A total of 221 students participated in the research from three separate public schools in rural Virginia. The results of the study did not indicate a relationship between entrance age measured in months and academic achievement in literacy skills scores. Future research to include how age impacts kindergarten students in other demographic regions, with a larger sample size, would aid in further development of this research.

Relationships Between Family Risks and Children's Reading and Mathematics Growth from Kindergarten Through Third Grade

Relationships Between Family Risks and Children's Reading and Mathematics Growth from Kindergarten Through Third Grade
Author: Amy Rathbun
Publisher:
Total Pages: 29
Release: 2005
Genre:
ISBN:

This study compares various approaches for incorporating family risk factors in explanatory models of children's achievement over the first 4 years of school. Living in poverty, in a single-parent household, in a household whose primary home language is non-English, and having a mother with less than a high school diploma are well-known risk factors related to lower achievement in reading and mathematics. This study examined three analytic approaches for describing children's level of family risk factors: 1) a cumulative risk index; 2) the four individual risk factor variables; and 3) unique combinations of the four risk factors, represented by a set of dummy-coded variables. Findings are based on a nationally representative sample of 10,345 children from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Kindergarten Class of 1998-99 (ECLS-K) who were first-time kindergartners in the fall of 1998. Data come from parent interviews in the fall of kindergarten and individual child assessments in reading and mathematics in the fall and spring of kindergarten, spring of first grade, and spring of third grade. A series of hierarchical linear models (HLM) were conducted to compare the relationships between each of the three risk factor approaches and children's initial achievement status and growth over the first 4 years of school in reading and mathematics. Results indicate that the unique combinations of risk factors present at kindergarten entry yielded more specific information on the relationship between family risks and achievement outcomes than the other approaches of using a cumulative risk index or using the individual risk factors as predictors. Children from single-parent households and those whose primary home language was non-English began school, on average, with lower achievement than children with no risks; however, if they had no other risk factors they tended to have higher initial scores and make greater growth over the first 4 years of school than children who's mothers did not complete high school. This study also found that children whose only risk factor was living in a home where English was not the primary home language had lower initial scores in mathematics but made greater growth over the first 4 years, in essence narrowing the achievement gap. Furthermore, increases in the number of risk factors were not always associated with greater achievement differences. Findings indicate that researchers should account for the specific combinations of risk factors present when exploring relationships between family background and student outcomes. (Contains 5 tables and 16 footnotes.).

Resources in Women's Educational Equity

Resources in Women's Educational Equity
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 420
Release: 1979
Genre: Sex differences in education
ISBN:

Literature cited in AGRICOLA, Dissertations abstracts international, ERIC, ABI/INFORM, MEDLARS, NTIS, Psychological abstracts, and Sociological abstracts. Selection focuses on education, legal aspects, career aspects, sex differences, lifestyle, and health. Common format (bibliographical information, descriptors, and abstracts) and ERIC subject terms used throughout. Contains order information. Subject, author indexes.