PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Young children develop better learning skills when taught by teachers of the same ethnicity, national US study suggests

2023-03-17
(Press-News.org) Young children who are taught by a teacher of the same ethnicity as themselves are developing better learning and problem-solving skills by the age of seven, new research suggests.

The effect was most pronounced in Black and Latinx children, the findings – looking at more than 18,000 pupils across the US – showed.

Published in the peer-reviewed journal Early Education and Development, the study revealed that if the ethnicity of children is shared with that of their teachers, the children are more likely to go on to develop better working memory. This is the ability to hold and process information in your mind – a skill which is essential for learning and problem solving.

“Diversifying the educator workforce represents a key step toward promoting greater equity in schools across the United States,” says lead author Professor Michael Gottfried, from the University of Pennsylvania’s Graduate School of Education.

“Our results add to the substantive evidence that ethno-racial representation among American educators matters by underscoring a key way in which students’ developmental skills are developed in schools. This is a critical step forward as students’ working memory, a core component of executive function, has been consistently linked to improvements in student achievement and is most malleable in early childhood.”

It's been known for some time that being taught by a teacher from the same ethno-racial background can improve a student’s academic attainment, such as math and reading test scores. However, this study is one of the first to explore the effect of teacher/student ethno-racial matching in children younger than age nine and to look at how it affects not only academic attainment, but also development.

The research analyzed data from 18,170 children who were part of the US Department of Education-led Early Childhood Longitudinal Study – Kindergarten class of 2011. This study follows a representative sample of children from the US population who were in kindergarten (pre-school children aged 3 to 6) in 2011. The study analyzed information on these children when they were in kindergarten through to the end of first grade (age 6 to 7).  

Specifically, the research looked at the effect of matching the race/ethnicity of Asian, Black, Latinx and White teachers and students on two measures of brain power known as ‘executive function’ which help children to engage in behavior working towards a goal. One measure was working memory; the ability to hold and process information in our minds. The other was so-called cognitive flexibility; the ability to change our attention and perspectives.

To measure cognitive flexibility, the researchers tested children’s ability to switch between thinking about different concepts. This was done through a task in which they had to sort cards by shape, color and border. Working memory was assessed by the researchers asking children to repeat a dictated series of numbers, with one extra digit added to the series every time the child remembered the previous series correctly. The study also looked at the effect of matched student-teacher race/ethnicity on children’s reading and math achievement scores. All groups were compared with a control group taught by a teacher from a different ethno-racial background.

Findings suggested that when students have an ethno-racial match with their teacher, their reading and math achievement scores were higher. The size of the effect was greatest in Black students and Latinx students. Hand in hand with this, working memory also improved in Black and Latinx children matched with a teacher of the same race/ethnicity. However ethno-racial matching appeared to have no effect on cognitive flexibility.

These findings held true regardless of differences in standards of teaching, whether children were taught for one year or two by a matched ethnicity teacher and whether or not the child attended a public or private school.

The authors say that, while the effect size is relatively small, when scaled up to population level and across multiple years of schooling, the effects could make a big difference.

There is growing interest in executive function skills because they can predict both strong human development and academic success. Previous research has also shown that there are stark differences in executive function based on race/ethnicity and levels of wealth. One study has shown that, on average, Black and Latinx children start kindergarten significantly behind their White peers in terms of working memory and cognitive flexibility.

It may be that Latinx and Black teachers are better able to support their students’ development, the study authors suggest. If that is the case, then promoting ethno-racial teacher/student matches could help to reverse the inequalities seen in executive function in younger children.

“Researchers have found that teachers of color are more likely to provide culturally relevant pedagogy, and when they do, they are able to better connect with students whose culture and experiences are often not reflected in standard school curricula and approaches,” adds Dr Gottfried.

Other factors at play could be students responding to having a role model at the front of the class of their own race/ethnicity or even unconscious bias of teachers.

“What a teacher believes about certain groups of students can alter how they deliver instruction, interact with parents, and grade papers, for example. This perspective could play out with a non-matched teacher not accurately recognizing the skill or developmental level of a student of color and thus not providing appropriate levels of scaffolded instruction, which has been linked to improvements in executive functions in addition to academic achievement,” says Dr Gottfried.

Future research should try to unpick the reasons why ethno-racial matching of students and teachers has this positive effect on attainment and development, the authors say.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

California’s anti-smoking push spurs big savings on health costs

2023-03-17
For every dollar spent, the state has seen a $231 return  In the late 1980s, when smoking was still allowed on some airline flights, California boosted its tax on cigarettes from 10 to 35 cents a pack, devoting 5 cents to programs to prevent smoking.   The newly created California Tobacco Control Program funded anti-tobacco media campaigns and community programs to try to improve public health, but some questioned whether the efforts were worth the cost.   Now comes an answer: For every dollar California spent on smoking control, health care costs fell by $231.   Over three decades ...

New trials show promising, minimally invasive procedure to treat resistant hypertension

2023-03-16
Hypertension remains poorly controlled worldwide and is becoming more common. Lifestyle changes and blood pressure-reducing drugs are the mainstays of therapy for hypertension, but despite widespread availability of these approaches, many patients with hypertension are not adequately treated. Those with uncontrolled hypertension are at increased risk of heart attack, heart failure, kidney disease and stroke. A recent study published in JAMA demonstrates the effectiveness of a procedure done under the skin, similar to placing a stent, ...

Dedicated Neuroendocrine Tumors Program launched at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center

Dedicated Neuroendocrine Tumors Program launched at Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center
2023-03-16
MIAMI, FLORIDA (March 16, 2023) – Aman Chauhan, M.D., and Sylvester Comprehensive Cancer Center at the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine have embarked on a mission to make Sylvester a top-level research center for neuroendocrine tumors and to make Miami a first-choice destination for patients seeking treatment for these complex cancers. Chauhan, an internationally recognized neuroendocrine expert and the newly named leader of Sylvester’s Neuroendocrine Tumor Program, has devoted his career to neuroendocrine ...

Leading MS/PML experts recommend genetic testing to prevent fatal brain infection

2023-03-16
In an editorial in the journal Frontiers in Neurology, two leading multiple sclerosis (MS) experts are advocating for genetic testing to identify MS patients who are at higher risk of developing a devastating side effect from their medications.  People with MS are faced with the excruciating decision of whether they should take medications that are effective in slowing the progression of the disease, but may also trigger this potentially fatal complication, a rare brain infection called progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (PML). The ...

Protein engineers navigate toward more targeted therapeutics

2023-03-16
More than a third of FDA-approved drugs work by targeting a G protein-coupled receptor, or GPCR. The human body has more than 800 types of GPCRs that provide cells with information about the external environment to calibrate responses. Drugs that either block or activate GPCRs are used to treat a wide range of diseases including hypertension, pain and inflammation. Most drugs bind to the outside of the receptor, but this can result in adverse side effects since receptors often resemble one another.  In a new study published in Nature, Sivaraj Sivaramakrishnan, a professor in the College of Biological ...

Antibody fragment-nanoparticle therapeutic eradicates cancer

2023-03-16
ITHACA, N.Y. -- A novel cancer therapeutic, combining antibody fragments with molecularly engineered nanoparticles, permanently eradicated gastric cancer in treated mice, a multi-institutional team of researchers found. The results of the “hit and run” drug delivery system, published in the March issue of Advanced Therapeutics, were the culmination of more than five years of collaboration between Cornell, the Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center (MSKCC) and biopharmaceutical company AstraZeneca. “I’ve seen beautiful ...

Childhood volunteering encourages future voting in elections, study shows

2023-03-16
Childhood volunteering encourages those from politically disengaged homes to go on and vote when they are older, a major new study shows. Community action leads to them becoming more interested in politics and to see voting as a duty, according to the research. However volunteering didn’t have the same impact for most children, so it shouldn’t be seen as the answer to falling voter numbers. The research was carried out by Dr Stuart Fox, now at the University of Exeter and conducted while he worked at Brunel University. He used the United Kingdom Household Longitudinal Survey and structural equation modelling to examine ...

Extinct animals on islands cannot be replaced

2023-03-16
Lush plants, large trees and many different, beautiful and colorful exotic animals. This is probably how most people imagine the small island of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean.  But that may not be the case. As in several other places in the world, the island and its nature are at risk of mass extinction, and in just a decade or two the flourishing nature and the many diverse animals may have dwindled to very few. At least if the extinction of the many plants and animals on the island continues. They are part of a particularly sensitive ...

DNA treatment could delay paralysis that strikes nearly all patients with ALS

DNA treatment could delay paralysis that strikes nearly all patients with ALS
2023-03-16
In virtually all persons with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and in up to half of all cases of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and frontotemporal dementia, a protein called TDP-43 is lost from its normal location in the nucleus of the cell. In turn, this triggers the loss of stathmin-2, a protein crucial to regeneration of neurons and the maintenance of their connections to muscle fibers, essential to contraction and movement. Writing in the March 16, 2023 issue of Science, a team of scientists, led by senior study author Don Cleveland, PhD, Distinguished Professor of Medicine, Neurosciences and Cellular and Molecular Medicine at University ...

Loss of Menin helps drive the aging process, and dietary supplement can reverse it in mice

Loss of Menin helps drive the aging process, and dietary supplement can reverse it in mice
2023-03-16
Decline in the hypothalamic Menin may play a key role in aging, according to a new study publishing March 16th in the open access journal PLOS Biology by Lige Leng of Xiamen University, Xiamen, China, and colleagues. The findings reveal a previously unknown driver of physiological aging, and suggest that supplementation with a simple amino acid may mitigate some age-related changes. The hypothalamus has been recognized as a key mediator of physiological aging, through an increase in the process ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Empty-handed neurons might cause neurodegenerative diseases

Black women hospitalised in USA with blood infection resistant to last-resort antibiotic at increased risk of death

NEC Society Statement on the Watson vs. Mead Johnson Verdict

Lemur’s lament: When one vulnerable species stalks another

Surf clams off the coast of Virginia reappear – and rebound

Studying optimization for neuromorphic imaging and digital twins

ORNL researchers win Best Paper award for nickel-based alloy tailoring

New beta-decay measurements in mirror nuclei pin down the weak nuclear force

Study uncovers neural mechanisms underlying foraging behavior in freely moving animals

Gene therapy is halting cancer. Can it work against brain tumors?

New copper-catalyzed C-H activation strategy from Scripps Research

New compound from blessed thistle promotes functional nerve regeneration

Auburn’s McCrary Institute, ORNL to partner on first regional cybersecurity center to protect the nation’s electricity grid

New UNC-Chapel Hill study examines the increased adoption of they/them pronouns

Groundbreaking study reveals potential diagnostic marker for multiple sclerosis years before symptom onset

Annals of Internal Medicine presents breaking scientific news at ACP’s Internal Medicine Meeting 2024

Scientists discover new way to extract cosmological information from galaxy surveys

Shoe technology reduces risk of diabetic foot ulcers

URI-led team finds direct evidence of ‘itinerant breeding’ in East Coast shorebird species

Wayne State researcher aims to improve coding peer review practices

Researchers develop a new way to safely boost immune cells to fight cancer

Compact quantum light processing

Toxic chemicals from microplastics can be absorbed through skin

New research defines specific genomic changes associated with the transmissibility of the monkeypox virus

Registration of biological pest control products exceeds that of agrochemicals in Brazil

How reflecting on gratitude received from family can make you a better leader

Wearable technology assesses surgeons’ posture during surgery

AATS and CRF® partner on New York Valves: The structural heart summit

Postpartum breast cancer and survival in women with germline BRCA pathogenic variants

Self-administered acupressure for probable knee osteoarthritis in middle-aged and older adults

[Press-News.org] Young children develop better learning skills when taught by teachers of the same ethnicity, national US study suggests