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Protecting the development of 5-11 year olds from the impacts of early disadvantage: The role of primary school academic effectiveness

Protecting the development of 5-11 year olds from the impacts of early disadvantage: The role of primary school academic effectiveness
Protecting the development of 5-11 year olds from the impacts of early disadvantage: The role of primary school academic effectiveness

Whether or not more effective schools can successfully mitigate the impacts of early disadvantage upon educational attainment remains uncertain. We investigated 2,664 children aged 6-11 years and measured their academic skills in English and maths along with self-regulation at 6, 7, and 11. Experiencing multiple disadvantages before age 5 strongly impaired later self-regulation and academic attainment. However, attending a more academically effective primary school for just a single year was found to partially protect all outcomes at age 6. In addition, more academically effective primary schools significantly lessened the extent to which earlier abilities in reading, writing, and self-regulation predicted these same abilities at age 11. Thus, although attending a more academically effective primary school does not eliminate the adverse impacts of multiple disadvantage experienced at a younger age, it can mitigate them by promoting better academic attainment and self-regulation up to age 11 for children who had experienced more disadvantages.

academic attainment, multiple disadvantage, primary school, protection, self-regulation
0924-3453
251-268
Sammons, Pam
6e0fda4f-4780-4368-a64e-637cb182428e
Hall, James
29e17a2b-dca0-4b91-be02-2ace4abaa6c4
Sylva, Kathy
0a7a1f5e-c538-405b-a74e-5518d0462d70
Melhuish, Edward
8d248900-133f-42a5-bb1a-efe1e412600f
Siraj-Blatchford, Iram
f47652c1-a493-4859-a7a0-ab6a4eafb0c0
Taggart, Brenda
18566b59-ef59-4fbb-a0a8-ae1dfdf80917
Sammons, Pam
6e0fda4f-4780-4368-a64e-637cb182428e
Hall, James
29e17a2b-dca0-4b91-be02-2ace4abaa6c4
Sylva, Kathy
0a7a1f5e-c538-405b-a74e-5518d0462d70
Melhuish, Edward
8d248900-133f-42a5-bb1a-efe1e412600f
Siraj-Blatchford, Iram
f47652c1-a493-4859-a7a0-ab6a4eafb0c0
Taggart, Brenda
18566b59-ef59-4fbb-a0a8-ae1dfdf80917

Sammons, Pam, Hall, James, Sylva, Kathy, Melhuish, Edward, Siraj-Blatchford, Iram and Taggart, Brenda (2013) Protecting the development of 5-11 year olds from the impacts of early disadvantage: The role of primary school academic effectiveness. School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 24 (2), 251-268. (doi:10.1080/09243453.2012.749797).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Whether or not more effective schools can successfully mitigate the impacts of early disadvantage upon educational attainment remains uncertain. We investigated 2,664 children aged 6-11 years and measured their academic skills in English and maths along with self-regulation at 6, 7, and 11. Experiencing multiple disadvantages before age 5 strongly impaired later self-regulation and academic attainment. However, attending a more academically effective primary school for just a single year was found to partially protect all outcomes at age 6. In addition, more academically effective primary schools significantly lessened the extent to which earlier abilities in reading, writing, and self-regulation predicted these same abilities at age 11. Thus, although attending a more academically effective primary school does not eliminate the adverse impacts of multiple disadvantage experienced at a younger age, it can mitigate them by promoting better academic attainment and self-regulation up to age 11 for children who had experienced more disadvantages.

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More information

Published date: June 2013
Keywords: academic attainment, multiple disadvantage, primary school, protection, self-regulation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 414673
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/414673
ISSN: 0924-3453
PURE UUID: bf5eaf9b-c554-4267-8c2a-3c316430db80
ORCID for James Hall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8002-0922

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Date deposited: 05 Oct 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:31

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Contributors

Author: Pam Sammons
Author: James Hall ORCID iD
Author: Kathy Sylva
Author: Edward Melhuish
Author: Iram Siraj-Blatchford
Author: Brenda Taggart

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