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Journal ArticleDOI

Mothers' Strategies for Children's School Achievement: Managing the Transition to High School.

TLDR
The authors found that mothers with a college education are more likely to choose college-preparatory courses for their child, regardless of their child's academic performance, and that the implementation of strategies does vary by the socioeconomic status of the mother.
Abstract
The American educational system requires parents to manage their child's school career to maximize their child's school achievement. But parents differ in the specific strategies they select to help their children through school. These strategies are one way in which family background influences children's school achievement. We expand the extant model of how parents influence their children's school careers to encompass various pragmatic strategies devised for the crucial transition to high school. We analyze the responses of a small heterogeneous sample of mothers of eighth graders, who are beginning the transition from middle school to high school. The findings of this exploratory study indicate that parents actively manage their child's school career in ways that can have direct consequences for their child's educational achievement. The number and types of schooling strategies suggested by mothers do not vary among mothers, which indicates that there may be standard parental strategies. The implementation of strategies, however, does vary by the socioeconomic status of the mother, even when the child's academic performance is controlled. Mothers who have at least a college education know more about their child's school performance, have more contact with the teachers, and are more likely to take action to manage their child's academic achievement. We also find that mothers with a college education are more likely to choose college-preparatory courses for their child, regardless of their child's academic performance. We discuss how these findings contribute to our understanding of the process by which parents' socioeconomic status influences the child's academic achievement and educational attainment.

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Visible Learning: A Synthesis of Over 800 Meta-Analyses Relating to Achievement

TL;DR: This meta-analyses presents a meta-analysis of the contributions from the home, the school, and the curricula to create a picture of visible teaching and visible learning in the post-modern world.
Journal ArticleDOI

School/Family/Community Partnerships: Caring for the Children We Share:

Joyce L. Epstein
- 01 Nov 2010 - 
TL;DR: When schools form partnerships with families and the community, the children benefit as discussed by the authors, and these guidelines for building partnerships can make it happen, but they need to be adapted to the specific needs of each community.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impact of parenting practices on adolescent achievement: authoritative parenting, school involvement, and encouragement to succeed.

TL;DR: Examination of the impact of authoritative parenting, parental involvement in schooling, and parental encouragement to succeed on adolescent school achievement in an ethnically and socio-economically heterogeneous sample of approximately 6,400 American 14-18-year-olds finds parental involvement is much more likely to promote adolescent school success when it occurs in the context of an authoritative home environment.

Environment of childhood poverty

Gary W. Evans
TL;DR: The accumulation of multiple environmental risks rather than singular risk exposure may be an especially pathogenic aspect of childhood poverty.
Journal ArticleDOI

The environment of childhood poverty.

TL;DR: The accumulation of multiple environmental risks rather than singular risk exposure may be an especially pathogenic aspect of childhood poverty as mentioned in this paper, where low-income children are read to relatively infrequently, watch more TV, and have less access to books and computers.
References
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Book

Equality of Educational Opportunity

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the importance of equity and excellence in education in the context of the 1968 Equalization of EdUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY (EOW) campaign.
Book

The American occupational structure

TL;DR: The American Occupational Structure is renowned for its pioneering methods of statistical analysis as well as for its far-reaching conclusions about social stratification and occupational mobility in the United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social class differences in family-school relationships: the importance of cultural capital

TL;DR: In this article, a qualitative study of family-school relationships in white working-class and middle-class communities was conducted, and the results indicated that schools have standardized views of the proper role of parents in schooling and social class provides parents with unequal resources to comply with teachers' requests for parental participation.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Educational and Early Occupational Attainment Process

TL;DR: Blau and Duncan as discussed by the authors presented a path model of the occupational attainment process of the American adult male population, which is not without power and is attested by the fact that it accounts for about 26 percent of the variance in educational attainment, 33 percent of variance in first job, and 42 percent in the level of occupational attainment.