Sunday, December 14, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Mothers' education key to kid's academic success

Darpan News Desk IANS, 11 Nov, 2014 09:18 AM
    Researchers have found that the academic success of your kids depends a lot on the education provided by mothers as children born to relatively older and educated mothers learn math and reading more quickly than children born to younger mothers.
     
    Trends indicate that mothers who give birth during adolescence have much lower rates of high school completion and college enrolment in comparison with their counterparts who delay their pregnancy, found the study.
     
    Children of mothers who are 19 and older usually enter kindergarten with higher levels of achievement, showed the study.
     
    These kids continue to excel in math and reading at higher levels through eighth grade when compared with children of mothers 18 years and younger, pointed out the study.
     
    "These results provide compelling evidence that having a child during adolescence has enduring negative consequences for the achievement of the next generation," said Sandra Tang, a psychology research fellow at the University of Michigan in the US.
     
    The negative consequences of teen mothers not only affects the child born when the mother was an adolescent, but also affect the mother's subsequent children as well.
     
    "These children - and others born to the mother when she was not an adolescent - never catch up in achievement across time to children whose mothers had them after completing their education," said Pamela Davis-Kean, associate professor of psychology at the University of Michigan.
     
    In 14,279 cases, the children's math and reading scores were collected in third, fifth and eighth grades.
     
    As growth in achievement normally stays the same across time for math and reading, these patterns highlight the importance of investing in early interventions that target adolescent mothers and provide them with the skills needed to promote their children's learning, concluded Tang.
     
    The findings appeared in the Journal of Research on Adolescence.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    A prescription to enjoy super 'medical marriage'

    A prescription to enjoy super 'medical marriage'
    Are you married to a doctor and not been able to achieve fulfillment both at home and at work? Don't worry as researchers have carefully...

    A prescription to enjoy super 'medical marriage'

    Want to be happy? Cut down on consumption

    Want to be happy? Cut down on consumption
    Are you working extra hard to earn more money with the hope that more spending power would make you happier? Think again!

    Want to be happy? Cut down on consumption

    Music training makes kids better learners

    Music training makes kids better learners
    Providing your kids with the opportunity to learn a musical instrument or to sing strengthens their reading and language skills, says a study....

    Music training makes kids better learners

    Diversity at workplace seen differently

    Diversity at workplace seen differently
    People's views about diversity of an organisation or team depends on whether or not members of their own race are included, says a study....

    Diversity at workplace seen differently

    Are you a neurotic? Check your Facebook photo use

    Are you a neurotic? Check your Facebook photo use
    If you have the habit of uploading more photos on Facebook to feel noticed and earn more "likes", it is more likely that you may be a "neurotic" than an extrovert....

    Are you a neurotic? Check your Facebook photo use

    Teenage girls 'dumb down' for boys: Study

    Teenage girls 'dumb down' for boys: Study
    According to an interesting study, young teenage girls often feel the need to play down how intelligent they are so that they do not intimidate their male peers....

    Teenage girls 'dumb down' for boys: Study