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Early reading skills and academic achievement trajectories of students facing poverty, homelessness, and high residential mobility
Date Issued
2012
Publisher
Washington: American Educational Research Association
Journal
ISSN
0013-189X
1935-102X
Citation
Educational Researcher, Dec 2012, vol. 41(9), pp. 366-374.
Type
Peer Reviewed Journal Article
Abstract
This investigation tested the importance of early academic achievement for later achievement trajectories among 18,011 students grouped by level of socioeconomic risk. Students considered to be at highest risk were those who experienced homelessness or high residential mobility (HHM). HHM students were compared with students eligible for free meals, students eligible for reduced price meals, and students who were neither HHM nor low income. Socioeconomic risk and oral reading ability in first grade predicted growth of reading and math achievement in Grades 3 through 8. Risk status predicted achievement beyond the effects of early reading scores and also moderated the prediction of later growth in reading achievement from early oral reading. Results underscore the early emergence and persistence of achievement gaps related to poverty, the high and accumulating risk for HHM students, and the significance of oral reading in first grade as both an early indicator of risk and a potential protective factor.
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