American Institutes for Research, Washington DC, United States.
Soc Sci Res. 2013 Mar;42(2):446-64. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2012.09.009. Epub 2012 Sep 25.
Current explanations of social class gaps in children's early academic skills tend to focus on non-cognitive skills that more advantaged children acquire in the family. Accordingly, social class matters because the cultural resources more abundant in advantaged families cultivate children's repertories and tool kits, which allow them to more easily navigate social institutions, such as schools. Within these accounts, parenting practices matter for children's academic success, but for seemingly arbitrary reasons. Alternatively, findings from current neuroscience research indicate that family context matters for children because it cultivates neural networks that assist in learning and the development of academic skills. That is, children's exposure to particular parenting practices and stimulating home environments contribute to the growth in neurocognitive skills that affect later academic performance. We synthesize sociological and neuroscience accounts of developmental inequality by focusing on one such skill-fine motor skills-to illustrate how family context alters children's early academic performance. Our findings support an interdisciplinary account of academic inequality, and extend current accounts of the family's role in the transmission of social inequality.
目前,对于儿童早期学术技能方面的社会阶层差距的解释往往集中在非认知技能上,而这些技能是来自更优越家庭的孩子在家庭中获得的。因此,社会阶层很重要,因为在优越家庭中更丰富的文化资源培养了孩子们的技能组合,使他们更容易在学校等社会机构中顺利发展。在这些解释中,育儿实践对孩子的学业成功很重要,但原因似乎很随意。或者,当前神经科学研究的结果表明,家庭环境对孩子很重要,因为它培养了有助于学习和发展学术技能的神经网络。也就是说,孩子接触到特定的育儿实践和刺激的家庭环境有助于促进影响后期学业表现的神经认知技能的增长。我们通过关注精细运动技能等一种技能来综合社会学和神经科学对发展不平等的解释,以说明家庭环境如何改变孩子的早期学业表现。我们的研究结果支持了学术不平等的跨学科解释,并扩展了目前关于家庭在社会不平等传递中作用的解释。