Wilde Elizabeth Ty, Finn Jeremy, Johnson Gretchen, Muennig Peter
Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY 10032, USA.
J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2011 Nov;22(4):1424-35. doi: 10.1353/hpu.2011.0148.
Early education interventions have been forwarded as a means for reducing social disparities in income and health in adulthood. We explore whether a successful early education intervention, which occurred between 1985 and 1989, improved the employment rates, earnings and health of blacks relative to whites through 2008.
We used data from Project STAR (Student Teacher Achievement Ratio), a four-year multi-center randomized controlled trial of reduced class sizes in Tennessee involving 11,601 students. Students were initially randomized within 79 schools to classes with 22-25 or 13-17 students. We linked subject records to Social Security Administration (SSA) earnings and disability data collected between 1997 and 2008-when the majority of subjects were between the ages of 18 and 28. We focused our analysis on annual, rather than cumulative, measures of earnings and employment because educational attainment after high school might reduce earnings through age 23. We considered three or more years of statistically significant positive (or negative) annual impacts to be a meaningful effect.
Project STAR improved cognition and high school graduation rates. These benefits were primarily realized among low-income and minority students. These early education benefits did not translate into reduced disability claims in adulthood for treated subjects. However, exposure to small class size increased employment for blacks, and increased earnings for black males (p<0.05). Exposure to small classes also led to an increase in earnings for white males. However, white females exposed to small classes experienced a net decline in earnings and employment across the later years of follow up (p<0.05), offsetting any gains by white males.
Exposure to small class size in grades K-3 appears to improve earnings and employment for black males and earnings for white males, while reducing employment and earnings among white females.
早期教育干预已被视为减少成年后收入和健康方面社会差距的一种手段。我们探讨了1985年至1989年间实施的一项成功的早期教育干预措施,到2008年时是否相对于白人提高了黑人的就业率、收入和健康水平。
我们使用了来自STAR项目(学生教师成就比率)的数据,这是田纳西州一项为期四年的多中心随机对照试验,涉及11601名学生,旨在研究缩小班级规模的效果。学生最初在79所学校内被随机分配到22 - 25名学生或13 - 17名学生的班级。我们将个体记录与社会保障管理局(SSA)在1997年至2008年期间收集的收入和残疾数据相链接,当时大多数受试者年龄在18至28岁之间。我们的分析重点是年度而非累积的收入和就业指标,因为高中后的教育程度可能会在23岁之前降低收入。我们将三年或更长时间具有统计学显著意义的年度正向(或负向)影响视为有意义的效应。
STAR项目提高了认知水平和高中毕业率。这些益处主要在低收入和少数族裔学生中得以体现。这些早期教育益处并未转化为接受干预的受试者成年后残疾索赔的减少。然而,接受小班教学增加了黑人的就业率,并提高了黑人男性的收入(p<0.05)。接受小班教学也导致白人男性收入增加。然而,接受小班教学的白人女性在后续几年的收入和就业出现了净下降(p<0.05),抵消了白人男性的任何收益。
在幼儿园至三年级接受小班教学似乎提高了黑人男性的收入和就业率以及白人男性的收入,同时降低了白人女性的就业和收入。