Abstract
Poverty or destitution is a severe problem that has a considerable effect on the ability of children to learn and to progress academically in school. To this perspective, income poverty, parental inputs, and family background, all have a considerable impact on the cognitive development of young children. The impact of income poverty on children's cognitive development is negative and significant. This negative effect is more significant for persistent poverty as it is more harmful to cognitive development than period to period poverty. It is noteworthy that teachers could play an essential role in helping students from low-income families when students face economic and educational challenges. The solution is developmentally appropriate, and culturally sensitive interventions such as the EAP could help young children from low SES families to improve their literacy skills, prepare better for kindergarten and perform better when they get to kindergarten. There is a need to look at structures as a problem when designed literacy intervention problems instead of the often used student-as-problem approach. Looking at structures-as-problem provides new ideas that can help improve reading and literacy. It is essential to re-design and pedagogical repertoires to ensure teachers become more prepared to help young students from low SES families.
Thesis Statement
Poverty drastically affects children's ability to learn. However, many studies show how the negative effects of poverty on education can be overcome.
THE PROBLEM
Researchers Compton-Lilly and Delbridge (2019) recently investigated the matter of how poverty affects children's ability to learn. The researchers utilized Bourdieu's theory of capital and statistics from longitudinal studies to investigate how poverty affects learning for two students from a poor urban community. In the study, the researchers particularly investigated the manner in which poverty affected the ability of poor parents to support their dependents in school. The researchers also particularly investigated how social capital and cultural capital can be leveraged in a bid to help families despite their social-economic position. The study is based on two case studies, as mentioned above. The two cases studies are of two students – the first is Bradford, who finds it difficult to read and learn, and the second is Alicia, who does not find it difficult to read and learn and generally performs better than average in school. Upon reviewing studies and research papers on United States schooling, race, class, and discussing Bourdieu's (1986) capital conceptualizations, the two researchers find out the challenges or difficulties that poor parents go through as their offspring move through the school system and become educated. They do this by interviewing two parents – one parent for the first student and the other for the other student. Data was then gathered in the study from the two parents and the families they represent and subsequently analyzed to find out the role played by academic economic capital (specific experiences and resources which require finances and usually result in academic success) in how their children were progressing in school. The researchers gathered the data by interviewing the parents. The results of the analysis revealed that the community the parents came from, the schools to which they sent their children, and their homes did not have sufficient academic capital, and this hurt how the children were progressing in school. Nevertheless, the results of the analysis also revealed that the parents and their families had access to other types of capital, including academic, social capital, and embodied academic capital. Based on their analysis and the results, the two researchers concluded that poverty or destitution is a serious problem that has a considerable effect on the ability of children to learn and to progress academically in...
Moreover, there are many other considerations that must be taken into account, any of which can obfuscate the impact of the World Bank's actions. UNESCO's perspective is less linear in its logic. Armed with a vague and shifting understanding of the antecedents of poverty, UNESCO not only has trouble measuring poverty but also has trouble drawing links between specific program actions and the elimination of poverty. UNESCO understands that broad
Nearly all failing schools fit this description (Six Secrets of School Success 2000)." If a country is to overcome educational problems, they must take into account the mentality that poverty creates and how that mentality deteriorates the wherewithal to do well in school. Although poverty is the issue that affects most underachieving schools, the idea of the super head was conceived as the answer to poorly performing schools. According to
Poverty has always been the bane of society. In modern-day times, with the easy spread of information, poverty is even more magnified. People in wealthy areas and situations are aware of exactly how poor people are wretched areas, and, more critically, people in wretched areas are entirely aware how wealthy people in more fortunate areas. Civilizations have always had vast discrepancies of wealth -- as is indicated by every GINI study
Education Disparity in America: Education has traditionally been regarded as a great equalizer in the United States because of its capability to lift less disadvantaged children and enhancing their probability to succeed as adults. As a great equalizer of conditions in the society, education has been regarded as the balance wheel of America's social machinery. Since the establishment of the first public school in the United States, there has been widespread
The paper looked at other possible explanations, such as teacher experience, but found little correlation (Mitchell, 2001). In the weakest schools, 81% of the students qualified for free or reduced-price lunches. In the schools rated highest, only 3 1/2% of students qualified for such programs. In addition, school ratings dropped in direct proportion to the rise in number of students receiving subsidized lunches. The paper used subsidized lunches as one
Poverty in Haiti -- Case Study CAUSES AND SOLUTIONS Poverty in Haiti Key Problem: Haiti remains among the poorest in the world despite strong interventions. a broad-spectrum approach under a proper leadership will address Haiti's multiple problems synergistically. Haiti overcame French colonial control and slavery in a series of wars in the early 19th century to become the world's first black-led Republic and the first independent Caribbean State (BBC, 2012). Its largely mountainous terrain and
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now