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Better Math and Reading Skills in Childhood Linked With Better Jobs and High Income as Adults

by Kathy Jones on May 11 2013 6:58 PM

 Better Math and Reading Skills in Childhood Linked With Better Jobs and High Income as Adults
A new study has found that having better reading and math skills by the time a child is seven years of age increases the likelihood that he or she has a higher income, better housing and better jobs during adulthood.
The childhood abilities predict socioeconomic status in adulthood over and above associations with intelligence, education, and socioeconomic status in childhood.

In light of ongoing debates about the impact that education standards have on children's lives, psychological scientists Stuart Ritchie and Timothy Bates of the University of Edinburgh wanted to investigate whether early math and reading skills might have effects that go beyond the classroom.

"We wanted to test whether being better at math or reading in childhood would be linked with a rise through the social ranks: a better job, better housing, and higher income as an adult," Ritchie and Bates said.

The researchers explored these relationships using data from the National Child Development Study, a large, nationally representative study that followed over 17,000 people in England, Scotland, and Wales over a span of about 50 years, from when they were born in 1958 to present day.

The data revealed that childhood reading and math skills really do matter.

Ritchie and Bates found that participants' reading and math ability at age 7 were linked to their social class a full 35 years later.

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Participants who had higher reading and math skills as children ended up having higher incomes, better housing, and better jobs in adulthood.

The data suggest, for example, that going up one reading level at age 7 was associated with a 5,000 pounds, or roughly 7,750, pounds increase in income at age 42.]

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The long-term associations held even after the researchers took other common factors into account.

"These findings imply that basic childhood skills, independent of how smart you are, how long you stay in school, or the social class you started off in, will be important throughout your life," said Ritchie and Bates.

So what might explain these long-term associations? The researchers believe that genes may play a role.

The finding was published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.

Source-ANI


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