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Neighborhood Social Capital, Neighborhood Disadvantage, and Change of Neighborhood as Predictors of School Readiness
Author(s) -
Charles Jones,
Jing Shen
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
urban studies research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-4193
pISSN - 2090-4185
DOI - 10.1155/2014/204583
Subject(s) - disadvantaged , collective efficacy , social capital , odds , psychology , fragile families and child wellbeing study , demographic economics , disadvantage , social mobility , educational attainment , human capital , demography , developmental psychology , social psychology , sociology , economics , logistic regression , economic growth , political science , medicine , social science , law
Neighborhood income and social capital are considered important for child development, but social capital has rarely been measured directly at an aggregate level. We used Canadian data to derive measures of social capital from aggregated parental judgments of neighborhood collective efficacy and neighborhood safety. Measures of neighborhood income came from Census data. Direct measures of preschoolers’ school readiness were predicted from neighborhood-level variables, with regional indicators and household/parental characteristics taken into account. Our findings show that (1) residing in Quebec, being Black, and having a parent who was born outside Canada are positively associated with children’s living in disadvantaged or low collective efficacy neighborhoods as well as with their living in low-income households. (2) Children’s odds of residential mobility were reduced when the origin neighborhood had higher collective efficacy but increased when the family rented rather than owned. (3) Both neighborhood collective efficacy and children’s ever having lived in a poor neighborhood were correlated with receptive vocabulary scores, but results were mixed for other cognitive dimensions. Children of younger mothers scored worse on receptive vocabulary. There were similar patterns for demographic predictors related to visible minority status, sibship size, and birth order. Neighborhood average income had no effect on cognitive outcomes when the region was controlled

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