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Variations in Family Structure and School-Age Children's Academic Achievement: A Social and Resource Capital Perspective
31
Citations
68
References
2010
Year
Family InvolvementKindergarten EducationEducational AttainmentEducationFamily StructurePreschool DevelopmentEarly Childhood EducationSocioemotional DevelopmentEarly Childhood ExperiencePrimary EducationKindergarten ClassSocial Capital TheorySchool FunctioningSocial SkillsEarly Childhood DevelopmentChildcare StudiesKindergarten TeachingChild DevelopmentEarly EducationSociologyEarly Childhood LiteracyPreschool EducationMedicineAcademic AchievementResource Capital Perspective
Data from the nationally representative Early Childhood Longitudinal Survey, Kindergarten Class of 1998–1999 (ECLS–K) involving more than 300 children who continuously resided in different variations of families from kindergarten through fifth grade were used to test the usefulness of social capital theory for understanding the academic improvement of school-age children over two points in time. Social capital theory was found to be a useful framework for explaining academic achievement for single-parent, stepparent, and biological family forms. Analyses revealed that children's change scores in reading and math differed across the three variations in family type. Children in single-parent households scored significantly lower than children from both biological and married stepparent households.
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