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The Nature and Impact of Early Achievement Skills, Attention and Behavior Problems. Greg J. Duncan, University of California, Irvine Katherine Magnuson, University of Wisconsin - Madison. Thanks to support from the Russell Sage Foundation, Foundation for Child Development and Spencer Foundation
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The Nature and Impact of Early Achievement Skills, Attention and Behavior Problems Greg J. Duncan, University of California, Irvine Katherine Magnuson, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Thanks to support from the Russell Sage Foundation, Foundation for Child Development and Spencer Foundation • And to CAPCA -- the Center for the Analysis of Pathways from Childhood to Adulthood – at the University of Michigan
Our questions: • What are the roles of academic, attention and socioemotional skills for later child well-being? • What is the likely impact on child well-being of randomly-assigned academic, attention and behavioral skills interventions prior to kindergarten or in primary school?
Skills, behaviors and attainment across childhood K-12 Adult Prenatal to school entry Child’s eventual school and labor market attainment, and adult crime Child’s kindergarten achievement, attention and behavior Child’s K-12 achievement, attention and behavior Prenatal and infant/toddler environment Home and child care environments Classroom and peer environments Genes Focal paths of influence Other paths of influence
Temperament Self-regulation/impulse control Negativity Working memory Cognitive SR Emotional SR/Effortful control Reactive Control Attention Shifting Executive Functioning Depressed/ anxious Attention/hyperactivity Anti-social/Aggression Internalizing BP Externalizing BP ATTENTION BEHAVIOR
Figure 5: Kindergarten correlations among achievement, attention and behaviors +.69 Reading test score Math test score Correlations: l r l >.60 +.41 +.29 .20 > l r l >.60 -.14 Attention/ engagement -.07 l r l <.20 -.51 -.36 Externalizing behavior problems Internalizing behavior problems +.25 -.19 -.12
Age-related Development of Externalizing and Internalizing Behavior Problems
School-entry Skills & Later Achievement (Duncan et al., 2007) • Six longitudinal datasets • Reading and Math achievement in 1st through 8th grade • Test scores and teacher reports • Key Predictors: • Math and reading achievement • Attention/engagement • Externalizing (Antisocial), Internalizing (Anxious/Depressed) • Covariates: Family SES, family structure, mother, child cognitive skills/IQ (5 of 6 datasets); mother’s AFQT in NLSY
Coefficients from Models of 3rd Grade Achievement – ECLS-K, full controls, including classroom fixed effects
Coefficients from Models of 3rd Grade Achievement – ECLS-K, full controls, including classroom fixed effects
Coefficients from Models of 3rd Grade Achievement – ECLS-K, full controls, including classroom fixed effects
Table 2: Effect sizes of School-entry Skills and Behaviors on Later Achievement; Meta-analysis of 236 Coefficients * p<.05; n=236 estimated coefficients; Source: Duncan et al. (2007). Meta-analytic estimates control for time to test, test/teacher outcome and study fixed effects; coefficients are weighted by inverse of their variances.
HS Completion and Crime • NLSY79 Child Supplement • 4 Cohorts: Children ages 5 or 6 in 1986, 1988, 1990, or 1992 • Impute missing data (N=3,893) • Outcomes: • High School completion (78%) & self-report arrest (23%) measured at age 19 or 20 • College attendance measured at age 20 or 21 (47%) • Key Predictors: • Achievement: PIAT Reading & Math Composite • Attention: attention/hyperactivity subscale of BPI • Behavior & MH: antisocial, anxious/depressed subscales of BPI • Covariates: Family income, family structure, mother AFQT, child temperament & child PPVT (ages 3/4)
Effect of a 1 sd Increase in Composite Achievement on the Probability of High School Completion, Full Controls Source: NLSY
Effect of a 1 sd Increase in Anti-social Behavior on the Probability of High School Completion, Full Controls Source: NLSY
What about the persistence problems? • Use worst 25% of the distributions at ages 6, 8 and 10 to define problems • Persistent problems if in worst 25% at all three measurements • Intermittent Problems if in worst 25% on 1 or 2 measurement • No problems (reference group) if never in worst 25% of distribution • Full Controls
Effect of Persistent and Intermittent Problems at Ages 6, 8 and 10 on the Probabilities of High School Completion and College Attendance, Full Controls ** p<.01 *p<.05 †p<.10; “problem” is defined as being in the worst quartile of distribution at a given age
Effect of Persistent and Intermittent Problems at Ages 6, 8 and 10 on the Probabilities of High School Completion and College Attendance, Full Controls ** p<.01 *p<.05 †p<.10; “problem” is defined as being in the worst quartile of distribution at a given age
Figure 12: Effect of a 1 sd Increase in Anti-social Behavior at Various Ages on the Probability of Ever Arrested, Full Controls Source: NLSY
Bold fontindicates R>=.20; Regular font indicates R<.2, but statistically significant
Bold fontindicates R>=.20; Regular font indicates R<.2, but statistically significant
Concluding thoughts… • Continuity within domain • Magnitude of associations do not suggest that outcomes are “predetermined” • Persistence of problems seems to be more predictive than skills at a point in time • Attention skills are surprisingly unpredictve • Need to align with intervention results