Publication | Closed Access
Kindergarten Entrance Age and Children's Achievement: Impacts of State Policies, Family Background, and Peers
340
Citations
32
References
2009
Year
Kindergarten Entrance AgeKindergarten EducationEducational AttainmentFamily BackgroundEducationPreschool DevelopmentEarly Childhood EducationTest ScoresElementary EducationSocial SciencesAdhdEducational PolicyCognitive DevelopmentUnderachieving ChildEarly Childhood ExperiencePrimary EducationExceptional ChildAchievement Test ScoresEarly Childhood DevelopmentEntrance AgeChild DevelopmentEarly EducationState PoliciesPediatricsSpecial EducationPreschool EducationEducation Policy
We present evidence that the positive relationship between kindergarten entrance age and school achievement primarily reflects skill accumulation prior to kindergarten, rather than a heightened ability to learn in school among older children. The association between achievement test scores and entrance age appears during the first months of kindergarten, declines sharply in subsequent years, and is especially pronounced among children from upper-income families, a group likely to have accumulated the most skills prior to school entry. Finally, having older classmates boosts a child's test scores but increases the probability of grade repetition and diagnoses of learning disabilities such as ADHD.
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