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Wikipedia

Socioeconomic status

Socioeconomic status (SES) is an economic and sociological combined total measure of a person's work experience and of an individual's or family's economic access to resources and social position in relation to others.[1][2] When analyzing a family's SES, the household income, earners' education, and occupation are examined, as well as combined income, whereas for an individual's SES only their own attributes are assessed. Recently, research has revealed a lesser recognized attribute of SES as perceived financial stress, as it defines the "balance between income and necessary expenses".[3][4][2] Perceived financial stress can be tested by deciphering whether a person at the end of each month has more than enough, just enough, or not enough money or resources.[2][5] However, SES is more commonly used to depict an economic difference in society as a whole.[6]

An 1880 painting by Jean-Eugène Buland showing a stark contrast in socioeconomic status

Socioeconomic status is typically broken into three levels (high, middle, and low) to describe the three places a family or an individual may fall into. When placing a family or individual into one of these categories, any or all of the three variables (income, education, and occupation) can be assessed.

Education in higher socioeconomic families is typically stressed as much more important, both within the household as well as the local community. In poorer areas, where food, shelter and safety are a priority, education is typically regarded as less important. Youth audiences are particularly at risk for many health and social problems in the United States, such as unwanted pregnancies, drug abuse, and obesity.[7]

Additionally, low income and education have been shown to be strong predictors of a range of physical and mental health problems, including respiratory viruses, arthritis, coronary disease, and schizophrenia. These problems may be due to environmental conditions in their workplace, or, in the case of disabilities or mental illnesses, may be the entire cause of that person's social predicament to begin with.[8][9][10][11]

Important factors

Income

Income refers to wages, salaries, profits, rents, and any flow of earnings received. Income can also come in the form of unemployment or worker's compensation, social security, pensions, interests or dividends, royalties, trusts, alimony, or other governmental, public, or family financial assistance. It can also come from monetary winnings, as from lotteries and other games or contests where money is awarded as a prize.

Income can be looked at in two terms, relative and absolute. Absolute income, as theorized by economist John Maynard Keynes, is the relationship in which as income increases, so will consumption, but not at the same rate.[12] Relative income dictates a person's or family's savings and consumption based on the family's income in relation to others. Income is a commonly used measure of SES because it is relatively easy to figure for most individuals.

Income inequality is most commonly measured around the world by the Gini coefficient, where 0 corresponds to perfect equality and 1 means perfect inequality. Low-income families focus on meeting immediate needs and do not accumulate wealth that could be passed on to future generations, thus increasing inequality. Families with higher and expendable income can accumulate wealth and focus on meeting immediate needs while being able to consume and enjoy luxuries and weather crises.[13]

Education

Education also plays a role in determining income. Median earnings increase with each level of education. As conveyed in the chart, the highest degrees, professional and doctoral degrees, make the highest weekly earnings while those without a high school diploma earn less. Higher levels of education are associated with better economic and psychological outcomes (i.e.: more income, more control, and greater social support and networking).[11]

Education plays a pivotal role in skillsets for acquiring jobs, as well as specific qualities that stratify people with higher SES from lower SES. Annette Lareau speaks on the idea of concerted cultivation, where middle class parents take an active role in their children's education and development by using controlled organized activities and fostering a sense of entitlement through encouraging discussion. Laureau argues that families with lower income do not participate in this movement, causing their children to have a sense of constraint. An interesting observation that studies have noted is that parents from lower SES households are more likely to give orders to their children in their interactions while parents with a higher SES are more likely to interact and play with their children. A division in education attainment is thus born out of these two differences in child-rearing. Research has shown how children who are born in lower SES households have weaker language skills compared to children raised in higher SES households. These language skills affect their abilities to learn and thus exacerbate the problem of education disparity between low and high SES neighbourhoods. Lower-income families can have children who do not succeed to the levels of the middle-income children, who can have a greater sense of entitlement, be more argumentative, or be better prepared for adult life.[14]

Research shows that lower SES students have lower and slower academic achievement as compared with students of higher SES.[15] When teachers make judgments about students based on their class and SES, they are taking the first step in preventing students from having an equal opportunity for academic achievement. Educators need to help overcome the stigma of poverty. A student of low SES and low self-esteem should not be reinforced by educators. Teachers need to view students as individuals and not as a member of an SES group. Teachers looking at students in this manner will help them to not be prejudiced towards students of certain SES groups.[16] Raising the level of instruction can help to create equality in student achievement. Teachers relating the content taught to students' prior knowledge and relating it to real-world experiences can improve achievement.[16] Educators also need to be open and discuss class and SES differences. It is important that all are educated, understand, and be able to speak openly about SES.[17]

Occupation

Occupational prestige, as one component of SES, encompasses both income and educational attainment. The occupational status reflects the educational attainment required to obtain the job and income levels that vary with different jobs and within ranks of occupations. Additionally, it shows achievement in skills required for the job. Occupational status measures social position by describing job characteristics, decision-making ability and control, and psychological demands on the job[citation needed].

Occupations are ranked by the Census (among other organizations) and opinion polls from the general population are surveyed. Some of the most prestigious occupations are physicians and surgeons, lawyers, chemical and biomedical engineers, university professors, and communications analysts. These jobs, considered to be grouped in the high SES classification, provide more challenging work and greater control over working conditions but require more ability. The jobs with lower rankings include food preparation workers, counter attendants, bartenders and helpers, dishwashers, janitors, maids and housekeepers, vehicle cleaners, and parking lot attendants. The jobs that are less valued also offer significantly lower wages, and often are more laborious, very hazardous, and provide less autonomy.[11][18]

Occupation is the most difficult factor to measure because so many exist, and there are so many competing scales. Many scales rank occupations based on the level of skill involved, from unskilled to skilled manual labour to professional, or use a combined measure using the education level needed and income involved.

In sum, the majority of researchers agree that income, education and occupation together best represent SES, while some others feel that changes in family structure should also be considered.[19] SES affects students' cognitive abilities and academic success.[19] Several researchers have found that SES affects students' abilities.[19]

Other variables

Wealth

Wealth distribution in the United States by net worth (2007).[20] The net wealth of many people in the lowest 20% is negative because of debt.[20] By 2014 the wealth gap deepened.

  Top 1% (34.6%)
  Next 4% (27.3%)
  Next 5% (11.2%)
  Next 10% (12%)
  Upper Middle 20% (10.9%)
  Middle 20% (4%)
  Bottom 40% (0.2%)

Wealth, a set of economic reserves or assets, presents a source of security providing a measure of a household's ability to meet emergencies, absorb economic shocks, or provide the means to live comfortably. Wealth reflects intergenerational transitions as well as accumulation of income and savings.[11][21]

Income, age, marital status, family size, religion, occupation, and education are all predictors of wealth attainment.

The wealth gap, like income inequality, is very large in the United States. There exists a racial wealth gap due in part to income disparities and differences in achievement resulting from institutional discrimination. According to Thomas Shapiro, differences in savings (due to different rates of incomes), inheritance factors, and discrimination in the housing market lead to the racial wealth gap. Shapiro claims that savings increase with increasing income, but African Americans cannot participate in this, because they make significantly less than Americans of European descent (whites). Additionally, rates of inheritance dramatically differ between African Americans and Americans of European descent. The amount a person inherits, either during a lifetime or after death, can create different starting points between two different individuals or families. These different starting points also factor into housing, education, and employment discrimination. A third reason Shapiro offers for the racial wealth gap are the various discriminations African Americans must face, like redlining and higher interest rates in the housing market. These types of discrimination feed into the other reasons why African Americans end up having different starting points and therefore fewer assets.[22]

Effects

Health

Recently, there has been increasing interest from epidemiologists on the subject of economic inequality and its relation to the health of populations. Socioeconomic status has long been related to health, those higher in the social hierarchy typically enjoy better health than those below.[23] Socioeconomic status is an important source of health inequity, as there is a very robust positive correlation between socioeconomic status and health. This correlation suggests that it is not only the poor who tend to be sick when everyone else is healthy, but that there is a continual gradient, from the top to the bottom of the socio-economic ladder, relating status to health. Parents with a low socioeconomic status cannot afford many of the health care resources which is the reason that their children may have a more advanced illness because of the lack of treatment.[24] This phenomenon is often called the "SES Gradient" or according to the World Health Organisation the "Social Gradient". Lower socioeconomic status has been linked to chronic stress, heart disease, ulcers, type 2 diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, certain types of cancer, and premature aging.

There is debate regarding the cause of the SES Gradient. Researchers see a definite link between economic status and mortality due to the greater economic resources of the wealthy, but they find little correlation due to social status differences.[25]

Other researchers such as Richard G. Wilkinson, J. Lynch, and G.A. Kaplan have found that socioeconomic status strongly affects health even when controlling for economic resources and access to health care.[26] Most famous for linking social status with health are the Whitehall studies—a series of studies conducted on civil servants in London. The studies found that although all civil servants in England have the same access to health care, there was a strong correlation between social status and health. The studies found that this relationship remained strong even when controlling for health-affecting habits such as exercise, smoking and drinking. Furthermore, it has been noted that no amount of medical attention will help decrease the likelihood of someone getting type 2 diabetes or rheumatoid arthritis—yet both are more common among populations with lower socioeconomic status.

Political participation

Political scientists have established a consistent relationship between SES and political participation. For example, in 2004, the American Political Science Task Force on Inequality and American Democracy has found that those with higher socioeconomic status participate at higher rates than those with lower status.[27]

Psychological

Language development

Home environment

The environment of low SES children is characterized by less dialogue from parents, minimal amounts of book reading, and few instances of joint attention, the shared focus of the child and adult on the same object or event, when compared to the environment of high SES children. In contrast, infants from high SES families experience more child-directed speech. At 10 months, children of high SES hear on average 400 more words than their low SES peers.[28]

Language ability differs sharply as a function of SES, for example, the average vocabulary size of 3-year-old children from professional families was more than twice as large as for those on welfare.[29]

Children from lower income households had greater media access in their bedrooms but lower access to portable play equipment compared to higher income children.[30] This eventually leads children from lower socioeconomic backgrounds to be at a disadvantage when comparing them with their counterparts in terms of access to physical activities.

Parental interactions

In addition to the amount of language input from parents, SES heavily influences the type of parenting style a family chooses to practice. These different parenting styles shape the tone and purpose of verbal interactions between parent and child. For example, parents of high SES tend toward more authoritative or permissive parenting styles.[31] These parents pose more open-ended questions to their children to encourage the latter's speech growth.[32] In contrast, parents of low SES tend toward more authoritarian styles of address. Their conversations with their children contain more imperatives and yes/no questions that inhibits child responses and speech development.[32]

Parental differences in addressing children may be traced to the position of their respective groups within society. Working class individuals often hold low-power, subordinate positions in the occupational world. This standing in the social hierarchy requires a personality and interaction style that is relational and capable of adjusting to circumstances.[33] An authoritarian style of address prepares children for these types of roles, which require a more accommodating and compliant personality. Therefore, low-SES parents see the family as more hierarchical, with the parents at the top of the power structure, which shapes verbal interaction.[34] This power differential emulates the circumstances of the working class world, where individuals are ranked and discouraged from questioning authority.

Conversely, high-SES individuals occupy high-power positions that call for greater expressivity. High-SES parents encourage their children to question the world around them.[33] In addition to asking their children more questions, these parents push their children to create questions of their own.[31] In contrast with low-SES parents, these individuals often view the power disparity between parent and child as detrimental to the family. Opting instead to treat children as equals, high-SES conversations are characterized by a give and take between parent and child.[34] These interactions help prepare these children for occupations that require greater expressivity.

Disparities in language acquisition

The linguistic environment of low and high SES children differs substantially, which affects many aspects of language and literacy development such as semantics, syntax, morphology, and phonology.

Semantics

Semantics is the study of the meaning of words and phrases. Semantics covers vocabulary, which is affected by SES. Children of high SES have larger expressive vocabularies by the age of 24 months due to more efficient processing of familiar words. By age 3, there are significant differences in the amount of dialogue and vocabulary growth between children of low and high SES.[35] The effects of SES on vocabulary extend from childhood to adolescence and even into early adulthood according to a large socioeconomically diverse study.[36] A lack of joint attention in children contributes to poor vocabulary growth when compared to their high SES peers. Joint attention and book reading are important factors that affect children's vocabulary growth.[37] With joint attention, a child and adult can focus on the same object, allowing the child to map out words. For example, a child sees an animal running outside and the mom points to it and says, "Look, a dog." The child will focus its attention to where its mother is pointing and map the word dog to the pointed animal. Joint attention thus facilitates word learning for children.

Syntax

Syntax refers to the arrangement of words and phrases to form sentences. SES affects the production of sentence structures. Although 22- to 44-month-old children's production of simple sentence structures does not vary by SES, low SES does contribute to difficulty with complex sentence structures. Complex sentences include sentences that have more than one verb phrase. An example of a complex sentence is, "I want you to sit there".[38] The emergence of simple sentence structures is seen as a structure that is obligatory in everyday speech. Complex sentence structures are optional and can only be mastered if the environment fosters its development.[38]

This lag in the sentence formation abilities of low SES children may be caused by less frequent exposure to complex syntax through parental speech. Low SES parents ask fewer response-coaxing questions of their children which limits the opportunities of these children to practice more complex speech patterns.[31] Instead, these parents give their children more direct orders, which has been found to negatively influence the acquisition of more difficult noun and verb phrases.[32] In contrast, high SES households ask their children broad questions to cultivate speech development. Exposure to more questions positively contributes to children's vocabulary growth and complex noun phrase constructions.[32]

Morphology

Children's grasp of morphology, the study of how words are formed, is affected by SES. Children of high SES have advantages in applying grammatical rules, such as the pluralization of nouns and adjectives compared to children of low SES. Pluralizing nouns consists of understanding that some nouns are regular and -s denotes more than one, but also understanding how to apply different rules to irregular nouns. Learning and understanding how to use plural rules is an important tool in conversation and writing. In order to communicate successfully that there is more than one dog running down the street, an -s must be added to dog. Research also finds that the gap in ability to pluralize nouns and adjectives does not diminish by age or schooling because low SES children's reaction times to pluralize nouns and adjectives do not decrease.[39]

Phonology

Phonological awareness, the ability to recognize that words are made up of different sound units, is also affected by SES. Children of low SES between the second and sixth grades are found to have low phonological awareness. The gap in phonological awareness increases by grade level.[40] This gap is even more problematic if children of low SES are already born with low levels of phonological awareness and their environment does not foster its growth. Children who have high phonological awareness from an early age are not affected by SES.[41]

Positive outcomes of low SES

Given the large amount of research on the setbacks children of low SES face, there is a push by child developmental researchers to steer research to a more positive direction regarding low SES. The goal is to highlight the strengths and assets low income families possess in raising children. For example, African American preschoolers of low SES exhibit strengths in oral narrative, or storytelling, that may promote later success in reading. These children have better narrative comprehension when compared to peers of higher SES.[42] Since 2012, there has also been some research on the Shift-and-persist model, which attempts to account for the counterintuitive positive health outcomes that can occur in individuals who grow up in low SES families.[43]

Literacy development

A gap in reading growth exists between low SES and high SES children, which widens as children move on to higher grades. Reading assessments that test reading growth include measures on basic reading skills (i.e., print familiarity, letter recognition, beginning and ending sounds, rhyming sounds, word recognition), vocabulary (receptive vocabulary), and reading comprehension skills (i.e., listening comprehension, words in context).[44] The reading growth gap is apparent between the spring of kindergarten and the spring of first-grade, the time when children rely more on the school for reading growth and less on their parents. Initially, high SES children begin as better readers than their low SES counterparts. As children get older, high SES children progress more rapidly in reading growth rates than low SES children. These early reading outcomes affect later academic success. The further children fall behind, the more difficult it is to catch up and the more likely they will continue to fall behind. By the time students enter high school in the United States, low SES children are considerably behind their high SES peers in reading growth.[45]

Home environment

Home environment is one of the leading factors of a child's well-being. Children living in a poor home with inadequate living conditions are more likely to be susceptible to illness and injuries.[24] The disparities in experiences in the home environment between children of high and low SES affect reading outcomes. The home environment is considered the main contributor to SES reading outcomes.[45] Children of low SES status are read to less often and have fewer books in the home than their high SES peers, which suggests an answer to why children of low SES status have lower initial reading scores than their high SES counterparts upon entering kindergarten.[45][46] Low SES parents are also less involved in their children's schooling.[46] The fact that many students go to school outside of their home to learn does not mean that it is the only determinant of their literacy growth. Parenting at home plays a role in shaping emotional, physical and mental health, all things that are extremely important to educational success in the classroom. This is a crucial factor that must be acknowledged by educators because boundaries such as constant parenting stress and approach to learning, for example, have a major impact on the students' literacy development.[47]

The home environment makes the largest contribution to the prediction of initial kindergarten reading disparities. Characteristics of the home environment include home literacy environment and parental involvement in school. Home literacy environment is characterized by the frequency with which parents engage in joint book reading with the child, the frequency with which children read books outside of school, and the frequency with which household members visited the library with the child. Parental involvement in school is characterized by attending a parent–teacher conference, attending a parent–teacher association (PTA) meeting, attending an open house, volunteering, participating in fundraising, and attending a school event. Resources, experiences, and relationships associated with the family are most closely associated with reading gaps when students' reading levels are first assessed in kindergarten. The influence of family factors on initial reading level may be due to children experiencing little schooling before kindergarten—they mainly have their families to rely on for their reading growth.[45]

Socioeconomic status plays a role in the involvement of certain parents over others. It affects parenting practices and as a result proves to be a strong predictor of child achievement when comparing households.[48] A parent’s involvement in their child's reading literacy performance progress is often overcome by demographic factors such as poverty, racial and ethnic identity, family and parenting stress, and the parent's educational level.[47] Studies show that when parents become involved in reading-related activities with their children outside of school, reading performance, literacy, love for reading and language skills are more likely to improve.[49] Parent involvement in students’ education is a large factor in their literacy achievement, but the way they parent has a large impact on the overall development of the child. These kinds of involvements are often determined by privilege and the level of stress that a parent must endure, especially when of low socioeconomic status. The reading literacy gap has been further exposed by the enhancement of these already existing inequalities. Studies have found a direct link between Family Processes (including parenting stress and discipline practices), Social-Emotional Readiness (including approaches to learning and self control), and Reading Literacy.[47] Although seeming unrelated, the way that a parent interacts with their child and their child's learning at home sets the stage for how well they will be able to improve their reading literacy in school.

The disadvantages of the achievement gap have exposed itself further for students and children as students have been forced to practice remote learning of the 2020 pandemic.[50] Limited access to the correct school resources affects a child's literacy level dramatically, even more so during the switch to online learning, given the combination of decreased parent involvement and access to outdoor play. Low to lower-middle class households had the highest rate of employment change during the pandemic, which includes loss of employment, reduced hours and/or reduced pay.[50] Large historical events like this one have only extenuated and exposed already existing inequities and in turn have negatively affected students of these demographics. The US Department of Labor revealed that layoffs that occurred during the COVID 19 pandemic had the biggest impact on historically minorities groups, which include Black, Latino, low income workers, and women.[50] This means that children of these same working adults experienced disparities as well. In a 2013 report by the US Department of Commerce, it was found that only 55% of African American and 58% of rural households had any internet access in their home.[51] This can be compared to the 74% of white and 81% of Asian American homes that had reliable internet.[51] Comparing this 2013 report to the occurrences existing in 2020 are not very different given that the demographic students still experience this "digital gap" and disproportionate lack in access to the internet and/or technological equipment necessary.[50] Without access to the correct materials at home, including books and digital tools, students cannot perform as well in reading literacy as their more privileged classmates.

Family SES is also associated with reading achievement growth during the summer. Students from high SES families continue to grow in their ability to read after kindergarten and students from low SES families fall behind in their reading growth at a comparable amount.[52] Additionally, the summer setback disproportionately affects African American and Hispanic students because they are more likely than White students to come from low SES families. Also, low SES families typically lack the appropriate resources to continue reading growth when school is not in session. After the long summer break, it is found that the reading literacy gap between middle and lower class students is about 3 months long.[52] This is a substantial amount of skills lost over a period of break from classes that, if not addressed, can grow extremely worse over time. It is especially important to address this issue and create solutions for young students of low SES in order to address the cycle of disadvantages faced by these communities. Studies show that by providing books to disadvantaged students over the summer, the reading achievement dramatically improves for elementary school students.[52] Specifically, providing access to self-selected books consistently over the months of summers is successful in limiting reading setbacks.[52] Many of these students continue to feel discouraged, have less motivation and therefore fall more behind. By providing encouragement through opportunity, there is more chance of future success in literacy development.

Neighborhood influence

The neighborhood setting in which children grow up contributes to reading disparities between low and high SES children. These neighborhood qualities include but are not limited to garbage or litter in the street, individuals selling or using drugs in the street, burglary or robbery in the area, violent crime in the area, vacant homes in the area, and how safe it is to play in the neighborhood. Low SES children are more likely to grow up in such neighborhood conditions than their high SES peers. Community support for the school and poor physical conditions surrounding the school are also associated with children's reading. Neighborhood factors help explain the variation in reading scores in school entry, and especially as children move on to higher grades. As low SES children in poor neighborhood environments get older, they fall further behind their high SES peers in reading growth and thus have a more difficult time developing reading skills at grade level.[45]

In a study by M. Keels, it was determined that when low-income families are moved from poor neighborhoods to suburban neighborhoods, there are reductions in delinquency in children.[53] When comparing different social statuses of families, the environment of a neighborhood turns out to be a major factor in contributing to the growth of a child.

School influence

School characteristics, including characteristics of peers and teachers, contribute to reading disparities between low and high SES children. For instance, peers play a role in influencing early reading proficiency. In low SES schools, there are higher concentrations of less skilled, lower SES, and minority peers who have lower gains in reading. The number of children reading below grade and the presence of low-income peers were consistently associated with initial achievement and growth rates. Low SES peers tend to have limited skills and fewer economic resources than high SES children, which makes it difficult for children to grow in their reading ability. The most rapid growth of reading ability happens between the spring of kindergarten and the spring of first grade. Teacher experience (number of years teaching at a particular school and the number of years teaching a particular grade level), teacher preparation to teach (based on the number of courses taken on early education, elementary education, and child development), the highest degree earned, and the number of courses taken on teaching reading all determine whether or not a reading teacher is qualified. Low SES students are more likely to have less qualified teachers, which is associated with their reading growth rates being significantly lower than the growth rates of their high SES counterparts.[45]

Influences on nonverbal behavior

Children of parents with a high SES tended to express more disengagement behaviors than their peers of low SES.[54] This study by Michael Kraus and Dacher Keltner was published in the December 2008 issue of Psychological Science. In this context, disengagement behaviors included self-grooming, fidgeting with nearby objects, and doodling while being addressed. In contrast, engagement behaviors included head nods, eyebrow raises, laughter and gazes at one's partner. These cues indicated an interest in one's partner and the desire to deepen and enhance the relationship. Participants of low SES tended to express more engagement behaviors toward their conversational partners, while their high SES counterparts displayed more disengagement behaviors. Authors hypothesized that, as SES rises, the capacity to fulfill one's needs also increases. This may lead to greater feelings of independence, making individuals of high SES less inclined to gain rapport with conversational partners because they are less likely to need their assistance in the future.[54]

See also

References

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External links

  • US Census Bureau report on educational attainment in the United States, 2003. June 2004
  • American Psychological Association's Socioeconomic Status Office

socioeconomic, status, economic, sociological, combined, total, measure, person, work, experience, individual, family, economic, access, resources, social, position, relation, others, when, analyzing, family, household, income, earners, education, occupation, . Socioeconomic status SES is an economic and sociological combined total measure of a person s work experience and of an individual s or family s economic access to resources and social position in relation to others 1 2 When analyzing a family s SES the household income earners education and occupation are examined as well as combined income whereas for an individual s SES only their own attributes are assessed Recently research has revealed a lesser recognized attribute of SES as perceived financial stress as it defines the balance between income and necessary expenses 3 4 2 Perceived financial stress can be tested by deciphering whether a person at the end of each month has more than enough just enough or not enough money or resources 2 5 However SES is more commonly used to depict an economic difference in society as a whole 6 An 1880 painting by Jean Eugene Buland showing a stark contrast in socioeconomic status Socioeconomic status is typically broken into three levels high middle and low to describe the three places a family or an individual may fall into When placing a family or individual into one of these categories any or all of the three variables income education and occupation can be assessed Education in higher socioeconomic families is typically stressed as much more important both within the household as well as the local community In poorer areas where food shelter and safety are a priority education is typically regarded as less important Youth audiences are particularly at risk for many health and social problems in the United States such as unwanted pregnancies drug abuse and obesity 7 Additionally low income and education have been shown to be strong predictors of a range of physical and mental health problems including respiratory viruses arthritis coronary disease and schizophrenia These problems may be due to environmental conditions in their workplace or in the case of disabilities or mental illnesses may be the entire cause of that person s social predicament to begin with 8 9 10 11 Contents 1 Important factors 1 1 Income 1 2 Education 1 3 Occupation 2 Other variables 2 1 Wealth 3 Effects 3 1 Health 3 2 Political participation 4 Psychological 4 1 Language development 4 1 1 Home environment 4 1 2 Parental interactions 4 2 Disparities in language acquisition 4 2 1 Semantics 4 2 2 Syntax 4 2 3 Morphology 4 2 4 Phonology 4 2 5 Positive outcomes of low SES 4 3 Literacy development 4 3 1 Home environment 4 3 2 Neighborhood influence 4 3 3 School influence 4 4 Influences on nonverbal behavior 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksImportant factors EditIncome Edit Income refers to wages salaries profits rents and any flow of earnings received Income can also come in the form of unemployment or worker s compensation social security pensions interests or dividends royalties trusts alimony or other governmental public or family financial assistance It can also come from monetary winnings as from lotteries and other games or contests where money is awarded as a prize Income can be looked at in two terms relative and absolute Absolute income as theorized by economist John Maynard Keynes is the relationship in which as income increases so will consumption but not at the same rate 12 Relative income dictates a person s or family s savings and consumption based on the family s income in relation to others Income is a commonly used measure of SES because it is relatively easy to figure for most individuals Income inequality is most commonly measured around the world by the Gini coefficient where 0 corresponds to perfect equality and 1 means perfect inequality Low income families focus on meeting immediate needs and do not accumulate wealth that could be passed on to future generations thus increasing inequality Families with higher and expendable income can accumulate wealth and focus on meeting immediate needs while being able to consume and enjoy luxuries and weather crises 13 Education Edit This section may require cleanup to meet Wikipedia s quality standards The specific problem is section not using a neutral point of view Please help improve this section if you can February 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Education also plays a role in determining income Median earnings increase with each level of education As conveyed in the chart the highest degrees professional and doctoral degrees make the highest weekly earnings while those without a high school diploma earn less Higher levels of education are associated with better economic and psychological outcomes i e more income more control and greater social support and networking 11 Education plays a pivotal role in skillsets for acquiring jobs as well as specific qualities that stratify people with higher SES from lower SES Annette Lareau speaks on the idea of concerted cultivation where middle class parents take an active role in their children s education and development by using controlled organized activities and fostering a sense of entitlement through encouraging discussion Laureau argues that families with lower income do not participate in this movement causing their children to have a sense of constraint An interesting observation that studies have noted is that parents from lower SES households are more likely to give orders to their children in their interactions while parents with a higher SES are more likely to interact and play with their children A division in education attainment is thus born out of these two differences in child rearing Research has shown how children who are born in lower SES households have weaker language skills compared to children raised in higher SES households These language skills affect their abilities to learn and thus exacerbate the problem of education disparity between low and high SES neighbourhoods Lower income families can have children who do not succeed to the levels of the middle income children who can have a greater sense of entitlement be more argumentative or be better prepared for adult life 14 Research shows that lower SES students have lower and slower academic achievement as compared with students of higher SES 15 When teachers make judgments about students based on their class and SES they are taking the first step in preventing students from having an equal opportunity for academic achievement Educators need to help overcome the stigma of poverty A student of low SES and low self esteem should not be reinforced by educators Teachers need to view students as individuals and not as a member of an SES group Teachers looking at students in this manner will help them to not be prejudiced towards students of certain SES groups 16 Raising the level of instruction can help to create equality in student achievement Teachers relating the content taught to students prior knowledge and relating it to real world experiences can improve achievement 16 Educators also need to be open and discuss class and SES differences It is important that all are educated understand and be able to speak openly about SES 17 Occupation Edit Occupational prestige as one component of SES encompasses both income and educational attainment The occupational status reflects the educational attainment required to obtain the job and income levels that vary with different jobs and within ranks of occupations Additionally it shows achievement in skills required for the job Occupational status measures social position by describing job characteristics decision making ability and control and psychological demands on the job citation needed Occupations are ranked by the Census among other organizations and opinion polls from the general population are surveyed Some of the most prestigious occupations are physicians and surgeons lawyers chemical and biomedical engineers university professors and communications analysts These jobs considered to be grouped in the high SES classification provide more challenging work and greater control over working conditions but require more ability The jobs with lower rankings include food preparation workers counter attendants bartenders and helpers dishwashers janitors maids and housekeepers vehicle cleaners and parking lot attendants The jobs that are less valued also offer significantly lower wages and often are more laborious very hazardous and provide less autonomy 11 18 Occupation is the most difficult factor to measure because so many exist and there are so many competing scales Many scales rank occupations based on the level of skill involved from unskilled to skilled manual labour to professional or use a combined measure using the education level needed and income involved In sum the majority of researchers agree that income education and occupation together best represent SES while some others feel that changes in family structure should also be considered 19 SES affects students cognitive abilities and academic success 19 Several researchers have found that SES affects students abilities 19 Other variables EditWealth Edit Wealth distribution in the United States by net worth 2007 20 The net wealth of many people in the lowest 20 is negative because of debt 20 By 2014 the wealth gap deepened Top 1 34 6 Next 4 27 3 Next 5 11 2 Next 10 12 Upper Middle 20 10 9 Middle 20 4 Bottom 40 0 2 Wealth a set of economic reserves or assets presents a source of security providing a measure of a household s ability to meet emergencies absorb economic shocks or provide the means to live comfortably Wealth reflects intergenerational transitions as well as accumulation of income and savings 11 21 Income age marital status family size religion occupation and education are all predictors of wealth attainment The wealth gap like income inequality is very large in the United States There exists a racial wealth gap due in part to income disparities and differences in achievement resulting from institutional discrimination According to Thomas Shapiro differences in savings due to different rates of incomes inheritance factors and discrimination in the housing market lead to the racial wealth gap Shapiro claims that savings increase with increasing income but African Americans cannot participate in this because they make significantly less than Americans of European descent whites Additionally rates of inheritance dramatically differ between African Americans and Americans of European descent The amount a person inherits either during a lifetime or after death can create different starting points between two different individuals or families These different starting points also factor into housing education and employment discrimination A third reason Shapiro offers for the racial wealth gap are the various discriminations African Americans must face like redlining and higher interest rates in the housing market These types of discrimination feed into the other reasons why African Americans end up having different starting points and therefore fewer assets 22 Effects EditHealth Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Recently there has been increasing interest from epidemiologists on the subject of economic inequality and its relation to the health of populations Socioeconomic status has long been related to health those higher in the social hierarchy typically enjoy better health than those below 23 Socioeconomic status is an important source of health inequity as there is a very robust positive correlation between socioeconomic status and health This correlation suggests that it is not only the poor who tend to be sick when everyone else is healthy but that there is a continual gradient from the top to the bottom of the socio economic ladder relating status to health Parents with a low socioeconomic status cannot afford many of the health care resources which is the reason that their children may have a more advanced illness because of the lack of treatment 24 This phenomenon is often called the SES Gradient or according to the World Health Organisation the Social Gradient Lower socioeconomic status has been linked to chronic stress heart disease ulcers type 2 diabetes rheumatoid arthritis certain types of cancer and premature aging There is debate regarding the cause of the SES Gradient Researchers see a definite link between economic status and mortality due to the greater economic resources of the wealthy but they find little correlation due to social status differences 25 Other researchers such as Richard G Wilkinson J Lynch and G A Kaplan have found that socioeconomic status strongly affects health even when controlling for economic resources and access to health care 26 Most famous for linking social status with health are the Whitehall studies a series of studies conducted on civil servants in London The studies found that although all civil servants in England have the same access to health care there was a strong correlation between social status and health The studies found that this relationship remained strong even when controlling for health affecting habits such as exercise smoking and drinking Furthermore it has been noted that no amount of medical attention will help decrease the likelihood of someone getting type 2 diabetes or rheumatoid arthritis yet both are more common among populations with lower socioeconomic status Political participation Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it January 2014 Political scientists have established a consistent relationship between SES and political participation For example in 2004 the American Political Science Task Force on Inequality and American Democracy has found that those with higher socioeconomic status participate at higher rates than those with lower status 27 Psychological EditLanguage development Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it February 2016 Home environment Edit The environment of low SES children is characterized by less dialogue from parents minimal amounts of book reading and few instances of joint attention the shared focus of the child and adult on the same object or event when compared to the environment of high SES children In contrast infants from high SES families experience more child directed speech At 10 months children of high SES hear on average 400 more words than their low SES peers 28 Language ability differs sharply as a function of SES for example the average vocabulary size of 3 year old children from professional families was more than twice as large as for those on welfare 29 Children from lower income households had greater media access in their bedrooms but lower access to portable play equipment compared to higher income children 30 This eventually leads children from lower socioeconomic backgrounds to be at a disadvantage when comparing them with their counterparts in terms of access to physical activities Parental interactions Edit In addition to the amount of language input from parents SES heavily influences the type of parenting style a family chooses to practice These different parenting styles shape the tone and purpose of verbal interactions between parent and child For example parents of high SES tend toward more authoritative or permissive parenting styles 31 These parents pose more open ended questions to their children to encourage the latter s speech growth 32 In contrast parents of low SES tend toward more authoritarian styles of address Their conversations with their children contain more imperatives and yes no questions that inhibits child responses and speech development 32 Parental differences in addressing children may be traced to the position of their respective groups within society Working class individuals often hold low power subordinate positions in the occupational world This standing in the social hierarchy requires a personality and interaction style that is relational and capable of adjusting to circumstances 33 An authoritarian style of address prepares children for these types of roles which require a more accommodating and compliant personality Therefore low SES parents see the family as more hierarchical with the parents at the top of the power structure which shapes verbal interaction 34 This power differential emulates the circumstances of the working class world where individuals are ranked and discouraged from questioning authority Conversely high SES individuals occupy high power positions that call for greater expressivity High SES parents encourage their children to question the world around them 33 In addition to asking their children more questions these parents push their children to create questions of their own 31 In contrast with low SES parents these individuals often view the power disparity between parent and child as detrimental to the family Opting instead to treat children as equals high SES conversations are characterized by a give and take between parent and child 34 These interactions help prepare these children for occupations that require greater expressivity Disparities in language acquisition Edit The linguistic environment of low and high SES children differs substantially which affects many aspects of language and literacy development such as semantics syntax morphology and phonology Semantics Edit Semantics is the study of the meaning of words and phrases Semantics covers vocabulary which is affected by SES Children of high SES have larger expressive vocabularies by the age of 24 months due to more efficient processing of familiar words By age 3 there are significant differences in the amount of dialogue and vocabulary growth between children of low and high SES 35 The effects of SES on vocabulary extend from childhood to adolescence and even into early adulthood according to a large socioeconomically diverse study 36 A lack of joint attention in children contributes to poor vocabulary growth when compared to their high SES peers Joint attention and book reading are important factors that affect children s vocabulary growth 37 With joint attention a child and adult can focus on the same object allowing the child to map out words For example a child sees an animal running outside and the mom points to it and says Look a dog The child will focus its attention to where its mother is pointing and map the word dog to the pointed animal Joint attention thus facilitates word learning for children Syntax Edit Syntax refers to the arrangement of words and phrases to form sentences SES affects the production of sentence structures Although 22 to 44 month old children s production of simple sentence structures does not vary by SES low SES does contribute to difficulty with complex sentence structures Complex sentences include sentences that have more than one verb phrase An example of a complex sentence is I want you to sit there 38 The emergence of simple sentence structures is seen as a structure that is obligatory in everyday speech Complex sentence structures are optional and can only be mastered if the environment fosters its development 38 This lag in the sentence formation abilities of low SES children may be caused by less frequent exposure to complex syntax through parental speech Low SES parents ask fewer response coaxing questions of their children which limits the opportunities of these children to practice more complex speech patterns 31 Instead these parents give their children more direct orders which has been found to negatively influence the acquisition of more difficult noun and verb phrases 32 In contrast high SES households ask their children broad questions to cultivate speech development Exposure to more questions positively contributes to children s vocabulary growth and complex noun phrase constructions 32 Morphology Edit Children s grasp of morphology the study of how words are formed is affected by SES Children of high SES have advantages in applying grammatical rules such as the pluralization of nouns and adjectives compared to children of low SES Pluralizing nouns consists of understanding that some nouns are regular and s denotes more than one but also understanding how to apply different rules to irregular nouns Learning and understanding how to use plural rules is an important tool in conversation and writing In order to communicate successfully that there is more than one dog running down the street an s must be added to dog Research also finds that the gap in ability to pluralize nouns and adjectives does not diminish by age or schooling because low SES children s reaction times to pluralize nouns and adjectives do not decrease 39 Phonology Edit Phonological awareness the ability to recognize that words are made up of different sound units is also affected by SES Children of low SES between the second and sixth grades are found to have low phonological awareness The gap in phonological awareness increases by grade level 40 This gap is even more problematic if children of low SES are already born with low levels of phonological awareness and their environment does not foster its growth Children who have high phonological awareness from an early age are not affected by SES 41 Positive outcomes of low SES Edit Given the large amount of research on the setbacks children of low SES face there is a push by child developmental researchers to steer research to a more positive direction regarding low SES The goal is to highlight the strengths and assets low income families possess in raising children For example African American preschoolers of low SES exhibit strengths in oral narrative or storytelling that may promote later success in reading These children have better narrative comprehension when compared to peers of higher SES 42 Since 2012 there has also been some research on the Shift and persist model which attempts to account for the counterintuitive positive health outcomes that can occur in individuals who grow up in low SES families 43 Literacy development Edit A gap in reading growth exists between low SES and high SES children which widens as children move on to higher grades Reading assessments that test reading growth include measures on basic reading skills i e print familiarity letter recognition beginning and ending sounds rhyming sounds word recognition vocabulary receptive vocabulary and reading comprehension skills i e listening comprehension words in context 44 The reading growth gap is apparent between the spring of kindergarten and the spring of first grade the time when children rely more on the school for reading growth and less on their parents Initially high SES children begin as better readers than their low SES counterparts As children get older high SES children progress more rapidly in reading growth rates than low SES children These early reading outcomes affect later academic success The further children fall behind the more difficult it is to catch up and the more likely they will continue to fall behind By the time students enter high school in the United States low SES children are considerably behind their high SES peers in reading growth 45 Home environment Edit Home environment is one of the leading factors of a child s well being Children living in a poor home with inadequate living conditions are more likely to be susceptible to illness and injuries 24 The disparities in experiences in the home environment between children of high and low SES affect reading outcomes The home environment is considered the main contributor to SES reading outcomes 45 Children of low SES status are read to less often and have fewer books in the home than their high SES peers which suggests an answer to why children of low SES status have lower initial reading scores than their high SES counterparts upon entering kindergarten 45 46 Low SES parents are also less involved in their children s schooling 46 The fact that many students go to school outside of their home to learn does not mean that it is the only determinant of their literacy growth Parenting at home plays a role in shaping emotional physical and mental health all things that are extremely important to educational success in the classroom This is a crucial factor that must be acknowledged by educators because boundaries such as constant parenting stress and approach to learning for example have a major impact on the students literacy development 47 The home environment makes the largest contribution to the prediction of initial kindergarten reading disparities Characteristics of the home environment include home literacy environment and parental involvement in school Home literacy environment is characterized by the frequency with which parents engage in joint book reading with the child the frequency with which children read books outside of school and the frequency with which household members visited the library with the child Parental involvement in school is characterized by attending a parent teacher conference attending a parent teacher association PTA meeting attending an open house volunteering participating in fundraising and attending a school event Resources experiences and relationships associated with the family are most closely associated with reading gaps when students reading levels are first assessed in kindergarten The influence of family factors on initial reading level may be due to children experiencing little schooling before kindergarten they mainly have their families to rely on for their reading growth 45 Socioeconomic status plays a role in the involvement of certain parents over others It affects parenting practices and as a result proves to be a strong predictor of child achievement when comparing households 48 A parent s involvement in their child s reading literacy performance progress is often overcome by demographic factors such as poverty racial and ethnic identity family and parenting stress and the parent s educational level 47 Studies show that when parents become involved in reading related activities with their children outside of school reading performance literacy love for reading and language skills are more likely to improve 49 Parent involvement in students education is a large factor in their literacy achievement but the way they parent has a large impact on the overall development of the child These kinds of involvements are often determined by privilege and the level of stress that a parent must endure especially when of low socioeconomic status The reading literacy gap has been further exposed by the enhancement of these already existing inequalities Studies have found a direct link between Family Processes including parenting stress and discipline practices Social Emotional Readiness including approaches to learning and self control and Reading Literacy 47 Although seeming unrelated the way that a parent interacts with their child and their child s learning at home sets the stage for how well they will be able to improve their reading literacy in school The disadvantages of the achievement gap have exposed itself further for students and children as students have been forced to practice remote learning of the 2020 pandemic 50 Limited access to the correct school resources affects a child s literacy level dramatically even more so during the switch to online learning given the combination of decreased parent involvement and access to outdoor play Low to lower middle class households had the highest rate of employment change during the pandemic which includes loss of employment reduced hours and or reduced pay 50 Large historical events like this one have only extenuated and exposed already existing inequities and in turn have negatively affected students of these demographics The US Department of Labor revealed that layoffs that occurred during the COVID 19 pandemic had the biggest impact on historically minorities groups which include Black Latino low income workers and women 50 This means that children of these same working adults experienced disparities as well In a 2013 report by the US Department of Commerce it was found that only 55 of African American and 58 of rural households had any internet access in their home 51 This can be compared to the 74 of white and 81 of Asian American homes that had reliable internet 51 Comparing this 2013 report to the occurrences existing in 2020 are not very different given that the demographic students still experience this digital gap and disproportionate lack in access to the internet and or technological equipment necessary 50 Without access to the correct materials at home including books and digital tools students cannot perform as well in reading literacy as their more privileged classmates Family SES is also associated with reading achievement growth during the summer Students from high SES families continue to grow in their ability to read after kindergarten and students from low SES families fall behind in their reading growth at a comparable amount 52 Additionally the summer setback disproportionately affects African American and Hispanic students because they are more likely than White students to come from low SES families Also low SES families typically lack the appropriate resources to continue reading growth when school is not in session After the long summer break it is found that the reading literacy gap between middle and lower class students is about 3 months long 52 This is a substantial amount of skills lost over a period of break from classes that if not addressed can grow extremely worse over time It is especially important to address this issue and create solutions for young students of low SES in order to address the cycle of disadvantages faced by these communities Studies show that by providing books to disadvantaged students over the summer the reading achievement dramatically improves for elementary school students 52 Specifically providing access to self selected books consistently over the months of summers is successful in limiting reading setbacks 52 Many of these students continue to feel discouraged have less motivation and therefore fall more behind By providing encouragement through opportunity there is more chance of future success in literacy development Neighborhood influence Edit The neighborhood setting in which children grow up contributes to reading disparities between low and high SES children These neighborhood qualities include but are not limited to garbage or litter in the street individuals selling or using drugs in the street burglary or robbery in the area violent crime in the area vacant homes in the area and how safe it is to play in the neighborhood Low SES children are more likely to grow up in such neighborhood conditions than their high SES peers Community support for the school and poor physical conditions surrounding the school are also associated with children s reading Neighborhood factors help explain the variation in reading scores in school entry and especially as children move on to higher grades As low SES children in poor neighborhood environments get older they fall further behind their high SES peers in reading growth and thus have a more difficult time developing reading skills at grade level 45 In a study by M Keels it was determined that when low income families are moved from poor neighborhoods to suburban neighborhoods there are reductions in delinquency in children 53 When comparing different social statuses of families the environment of a neighborhood turns out to be a major factor in contributing to the growth of a child School influence Edit School characteristics including characteristics of peers and teachers contribute to reading disparities between low and high SES children For instance peers play a role in influencing early reading proficiency In low SES schools there are higher concentrations of less skilled lower SES and minority peers who have lower gains in reading The number of children reading below grade and the presence of low income peers were consistently associated with initial achievement and growth rates Low SES peers tend to have limited skills and fewer economic resources than high SES children which makes it difficult for children to grow in their reading ability The most rapid growth of reading ability happens between the spring of kindergarten and the spring of first grade Teacher experience number of years teaching at a particular school and the number of years teaching a particular grade level teacher preparation to teach based on the number of courses taken on early education elementary education and child development the highest degree earned and the number of courses taken on teaching reading all determine whether or not a reading teacher is qualified Low SES students are more likely to have less qualified teachers which is associated with their reading growth rates being significantly lower than the growth rates of their high SES counterparts 45 Influences on nonverbal behavior Edit Children of parents with a high SES tended to express more disengagement behaviors than their peers of low SES 54 This study by Michael Kraus and Dacher Keltner was published in the December 2008 issue of Psychological Science In this context disengagement behaviors included self grooming fidgeting with nearby objects and doodling while being addressed In contrast engagement behaviors included head nods eyebrow raises laughter and gazes at one s partner These cues indicated an interest in one s partner and the desire to deepen and enhance the relationship Participants of low SES tended to express more engagement behaviors toward their conversational partners while their high SES counterparts displayed more disengagement behaviors Authors hypothesized that as SES rises the capacity to fulfill one s needs also increases This may lead to greater feelings of independence making individuals of high SES less inclined to gain rapport with conversational partners because they are less likely to need their assistance in the future 54 See also Edit Society portalEconomic mobility Intelligence and socio economic status NRS social grade Social class Social status Status attainment Shift and persist modelReferences Edit Oakes J M Rossi P H 2003 The measurement of SES in health research Current practice and steps toward a new approach PDF Social Science amp Medicine 56 4 769 784 doi 10 1016 s0277 9536 02 00073 4 PMID 12560010 a b c Palta Priya Szanton Sarah L Semba Richard D Thorpe Roland J Varadhan Ravi Fried Linda P 2015 Financial strain is associated with increased oxidative stress levels The Women s Health and Aging Studies Geriatric Nursing 36 2 S33 S37 doi 10 1016 j gerinurse 2015 02 020 PMC 6053071 PMID 25784083 Szanton S L Allen J K Thorpe R 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developmental study Linguistics 47 1 45 63 doi 10 1515 LING 2009 002 S2CID 144231550 Schiff Rachel Einav Lotem 2012 Schiff R amp Lotem E 2011 Effects of phonological and morphological awareness on children s word reading development from two socioeconomic backgrounds First Language 31 2 139 163 doi 10 1177 0142723710393098 S2CID 144359913 Noble Kimberley Michael Wolmetz Lisa Ochs Martha Farah Bruce McCandliss 2006 Brain behavior relationships in reading acquisition are modulated by socioeconomic factors Developmental Science 9 6 642 654 doi 10 1111 j 1467 7687 2006 00542 x PMID 17059461 S2CID 2917133 Gardner Neblett Nicole Elisabeth Pungello Iheoma Iruka 2012 Oral narrative skills Implications for the reading development of African American children Child Development Perspectives 6 3 218 224 doi 10 1111 j 1750 8606 2011 00225 x Chen Edith Miller Gregory E March 2012 Shift and Persist Strategies Why Low Socioeconomic Status Isn t Always Bad for Health Perspectives on Psychological 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Walter Kaya Yasmine Amatea Ellen 5 June 2019 A Model of Parenting Risk and Resilience Social Emotional Readiness and Reading Achievement in Kindergarten Children from Low Income Families Model Journal of Child and Family Studies 28 10 2826 2841 doi 10 1007 s10826 019 01462 0 ISSN 1062 1024 S2CID 195236178 Ogg Julia Anthony Christopher J February 2020 Process and context Longitudinal effects of the interactions between parental involvement parental warmth and SES on academic achievement Journal of School Psychology 78 96 114 doi 10 1016 j jsp 2019 11 004 ISSN 0022 4405 PMID 32178814 S2CID 212741587 Homework in the Foundation Phase Perceptions of principals of eight public primary schools in Johannesburg South African Journal of Education 38 2 31 May 2018 doi 10 15700 saje v38n2a1461 ISSN 0256 0100 a b c d Chen Cliff Yung Chi Byrne Elena Velez Tanya 12 March 2021 Impact of the 2020 pandemic of COVID 19 on Families with School aged Children in the United States Roles of Income Level and Race Journal of Family Issues 43 3 719 740 doi 10 1177 0192513x21994153 ISSN 0192 513X PMC 7957335 a b Chen Tim Wanberg Rim C Gouioa Elizabeth T Brown Marcia J S Chen J C Y Kraiger Judy J Kurt 2019 Engaging Parents Involvement in K 12 Online Learning Settings Are We Meeting the Needs of Underserved Students Journal of e Learning amp Knowledge Society 15 2 113 20 via Ebscohost a b c d Allington R L McGill Franzen A Camilli G Williams L Graff J Zeig J 2010 WWC Quick Review of the Report Addressing Summer Reading Setback Among Economically Disadvantaged Elementary Students PsycEXTRA Dataset doi 10 1037 e596832011 001 Retrieved 7 May 2021 Santiago Catherine DeCarlo Wadsworth Martha E Stump Jessica 1 March 2011 Socioeconomic status neighborhood disadvantage and poverty related stress Prospective effects on psychological syndromes among diverse low income families Journal of Economic Psychology Special Issue on The Psychology and Behavioural Economics of Poverty 32 2 218 230 doi 10 1016 j joep 2009 10 008 a b Kraus M W Keltner D 2008 Signs of Socioeconomic Status A Thin Slicing Approach Psychological Science 20 1 99 106 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9280 2008 02251 x PMID 19076316 S2CID 9308617 dead link dead link External links EditUS Census Bureau report on educational attainment in the United States 2003 June 2004 American Psychological Association s Socioeconomic Status Office Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Socioeconomic status amp oldid 1146021209, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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