Friday, January 16, 2015

Teach-In - Week 1


When the question was posed if IQ is equal between races, my first thought was that yes it is and there are no natural reasons for it to be unequal. The more I thought about it, the more I realized that these differences were most likely caused by circumstances that each family must face. Families in poverty have less access to healthy foods that would give their children the substantial nutrition their brains need to develop. When we think of cities, we think of densely packed and poorly funded schools, which will be less conducive to a high quality education. The factors that account for these differences are problems that our society faces as a whole, and cannot be blamed on individual families.

I work at a daycare center during the summers, and the center prides itself on being a high quality educational experience for children of all ages. The company runs a scholarship contest each year to find a high school senior who previously attended their centers, and this student must submit an essay about how the daycare impacted their future. I have seen firsthand how stressful it is to teach at this daycare, simply from the pressure of corporate for them to do nothing but superior work. The infant room, which contains children under the age of six months, requires weekly lesson plans covering a range of topics (art, science, social activity, reading). Obviously, this company places huge emphasis on education, and the price tag certainly reflects that. Monthly tuition is in the thousands, even more so for infants. Daycare services like this are simply not an option for low income families, which I think further contributes to the divide in IQ scores. Even as I think about it now, I cannot think of a single African American student that attended while I worked there, and I am ashamed that I can't come up with even one name. There are children of other races, but even those numbers are low, at only around 2-3 per classroom of 15-20. The staff is diverse and accurately reflects the diversity of our population, but the student body certainly does not. Even in my county, which is listed as one of the five wealthiest counties in the entire United States, there is a clear divide between race and access to high-quality early childhood education, which may be a factor in IQ scores later in life. It is grossly unfair that all children do not have the same opportunities to grow and learn, and it is even worse that these opportunities are often limited by the child's race.

2 comments:

  1. So what do you think we should do about this? I think the high tuition of schools (all schools really) In America is another large issue that impacts everyone in the country. And I think technically every child does have the same opportunity to get a good education, our countrey was founded that way to give everybuddy and equal chance, but then capitolism swooped in a ruined it all. I think it is a shame that the children who attended the day care (probably white children) are the ones who get the scholarship. If the daycare tuition is so high, most likely the parents are fairly wealthy, which means they could afford to pay tuition for their kids. Even though capitolism is (in my oppinion) ruining people in America, it's the way our country is opperating currently and I think what we should be doing is taking money and supporting learning centers for SES disadvantaged kids.

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  2. I would agree that childhood development is a contributing factor to lower IQ test scores. It reminds me of a study we learned about in Neuroscience where lab rats with more stimulation were able to perform cognitive tasks more successfully than the control group with little to no stimulation. The stimulation also lead to heavier temporal lobes. It is difficult to change the brain after development.

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