Why are some individuals more
capable than others? One reason,
according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, is that the
achievement gap between individuals begins early in life.
The Federal Reserve Bank? What knowledge could they possibly have of
this situation?
It turns out that this particular
Reserve Bank has been conducting a longitudinal study of early childhood
development. The study tracked 123
low-income families since the 1960s.
Children were randomly selected either to be in a control group (no
special schooling), or to attend a high-quality program with well-trained
teachers and receive weekly home visits.
As we might guess, the outcomes
are dramatic. The study shows that the
benefit-cost ratio is $16 for every $1 spent. The bottom line is that when children are prepared for school,
they are more likely to be productive in the workplace as adults. So what should employers do? The answers seems clear:
- Hire employees who have had pre-kindergarten schooling, and
- Support by advocacy (i.e., by voting and participating in the local education conversation) the implementation of early childhood programs.
1 comment:
As the book title reads, "Everything I needed to know I learned in Kindergarten," people at work need life skills...and regardless of where they get them, they need them BEFORE they come to work. High schools and universities should consider teaching life/work skills to students before they graduate.
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