University of Michigan: Preschool children of professionals verbally outcompete working class peers
8:36 pm - 07/02/2011
University of Michigan: Class in session: Upper middle class preschoolers silence less fortunate peers
June 29, 2011
June 29, 2011
ANN ARBOR, Mich.—Preschool upper middle class children tend to ask for help and argue their points effectively--sometimes to the detriment of their classmates from working class families.Class distinctions and advantages begin early.
A new University of Michigan study finds that 4-year-old, upper middle class kids use their strong verbal skills to engage teachers in more conversations and to draw upon reasoning that appears to be fair to get their way. This behavior often silences working class children who feel less confident or willing to express their views, thus giving them less power and fewer opportunities to develop their own language skills.
The study's author Jessi Streib, a graduate student in the U-M Department of Sociology, defined the children as upper middle class if their parents were college educated and worked in occupations such as upper level managers, doctors, engineers and professors. Working class parents were construction workers, short-order cooks or were temporarily unemployed, and did not have four-year college degrees.
Upper middle class kids tended to have larger vocabularies, spoke more often to "take a stand" to gain the teachers' attention, interrupted more, and felt more entitled to speak to teachers than working class children.
"There is a subtle division made between those which advanced vocabulary skills, the confidence to speak up, and the cultural idea that interrupting adults is expected or at least acceptable," Streib said.
The research involved an eight-month analysis of social class inequality at a Midwest preschool.
"The teacher-student interactions meant that the advantaged children received more advantages, despite teachers' best intentions," she said.
The working class children's needs go unmet for much longer because they take more time to approach teachers and then use fewer words to explain problems. "Meanwhile, upper middle class children often demand the teachers' attention by talking more and treating teachers as equals," she said.
The different levels of power also affected who was able to play with toys. Upper middle class students argued more often over toys and won the majority of the disputes with working class children. They were often first to suggest a solution and quickly take steps to implement the plan, while working class students were more likely to go along with their counterparts' suggestions without proposing their own solutions, Streib said.
The gap between the classes could have lasting implications for the children. Streib speculated that the differences could appear in standardized test scores and college entrance exams, all of which compound existing disparities by routing children of different classes into paths that produce various life outcomes.
The findings appear in Qualitative Sociology.
I was always grateful there was no book limit.
I didn't have a computer until my second year of college after I had worked at McDonalds for a few months so the library was kind of like my second home. I was there three or more times a week, checking my email, going on discussions boards and reading up on spoilers as well as checking out books, of course.
I used to hate Bill Gates until his money helped make that all possible. It was his money that paid for six computers with internet for my city's library. A lot of people, including me, have used that library for job purposes, including printing out resumes and forms.
Libraries are the only thing keeping the gap between the Haves and Have Nots from widening into a giant chasm. I am sometimes deeply worried about us falling into another dark age where books and reading are unappreciated. The more we turn books and reading into yet another technology, the farther away it will become from so many who depend on books from libraries or borrowed from friends or bought at a thrift store for a buck or so.
When I look up books now, a lot of them are electronic copies at the library which means it's cheaper and they're able to get more for their meager money, but how are patrons supposed to use them?
It's like there's this whole class of people and they're just ignored.