In poorer districts, the high concentration of
children living in poverty means students come to school with added baggage - hunger, housing instability, exposure to crime and violence - that can affect how well they do in the classroom.
Not exact matches
According to the Census Bureau,
in 2012 the
poverty rate among
children living with only their mother was 47.2 %; by contrast, the
poverty rate among
children living with their married parents was 11.1 %,
meaning that a
child living with a single mother was almost five times as likely to be poor as a
child living with married parents.
Poverty can lead to
living fully
in the present, which might
mean less long - term financial planning or educational planning for
children especially.
Cash transfer programs, for instance, are an important
means of improving economic security and access to maternal and
child health care for pregnant women and new mothers, particularly for women
living in poverty.
In the United States, 1.17 million children live in «extreme poverty,» meaning family members live on less than $ 2 per da
In the United States, 1.17 million
children live in «extreme poverty,» meaning family members live on less than $ 2 per da
in «extreme
poverty,»
meaning family members
live on less than $ 2 per day.
- GDP per capita is still lower than it was before the recession - Earnings and household incomes are far lower
in real terms than they were
in 2010 - Five million people earn less than the
Living Wage - George Osborne has failed to balance the Budget by 2015,
meaning 40 % of the work must be done
in the next parliament - Absolute
poverty increased by 300,000 between 2010/11 and 2012/13 - Almost two - thirds of poor
children fail to achieve the basics of five GCSEs including English and maths - Children eligible for free school meals remain far less likely to be school - ready than their peers - Childcare affordability and availability means many parents struggle to return to work - Poor children are less likely to be taught by the best teachers - The education system is currently going through widespread reform and the full effects will not be seen for some time - Long - term youth unemployment of over 12 months is nearly double pre-recession levels at around 200,000 - Pay of young people took a severe hit over the recession and is yet to recover - The number of students from state schools and disadvantaged backgrounds going to Russell Group universities has flatlined for
children fail to achieve the basics of five GCSEs including English and maths -
Children eligible for free school meals remain far less likely to be school - ready than their peers - Childcare affordability and availability means many parents struggle to return to work - Poor children are less likely to be taught by the best teachers - The education system is currently going through widespread reform and the full effects will not be seen for some time - Long - term youth unemployment of over 12 months is nearly double pre-recession levels at around 200,000 - Pay of young people took a severe hit over the recession and is yet to recover - The number of students from state schools and disadvantaged backgrounds going to Russell Group universities has flatlined for
Children eligible for free school meals remain far less likely to be school - ready than their peers - Childcare affordability and availability
means many parents struggle to return to work - Poor
children are less likely to be taught by the best teachers - The education system is currently going through widespread reform and the full effects will not be seen for some time - Long - term youth unemployment of over 12 months is nearly double pre-recession levels at around 200,000 - Pay of young people took a severe hit over the recession and is yet to recover - The number of students from state schools and disadvantaged backgrounds going to Russell Group universities has flatlined for
children are less likely to be taught by the best teachers - The education system is currently going through widespread reform and the full effects will not be seen for some time - Long - term youth unemployment of over 12 months is nearly double pre-recession levels at around 200,000 - Pay of young people took a severe hit over the recession and is yet to recover - The number of students from state schools and disadvantaged backgrounds going to Russell Group universities has flatlined for a decade
And that's an increasingly important problem: a new analysis of official figures by ECP shows that the number of
children in poverty in working households has risen by 300,000 since 2010 to reach 2.4 million -
meaning that nearly two thirds of
children in poverty live in working households.
By this I
mean that we must pay much more attention to what's going on
in the
lives of
children — especially
children who are disadvantaged by
poverty — that prevents them from taking advantage from even optimized learning environments.
As a result, Texans had no objective
means of knowing whether students
in Webb County, which has a significant number of
children living in poverty, were doing as well
in reading and math as students
in more prosperous places like Collin County.
Far too many students are stuck
in a cycle of unending
poverty, and though schools are
meant to be a
means of escaping such a status, many can not
live up to that mission for every
child.
About half of them, some 7.1 million
children,
lived in extreme
poverty,
meaning a family of four existed on less than $ 12,000 per year.
School reform definitely can make some progress
in raising student achievement, but what about the
children who have all odds against them —
meaning they have no support at home and they
live in poverty?
Of that group, Kids Count reported 7,500
children were
living in extreme
poverty,
meaning their family income was below $ 12,018 a year
in a family of four with two
children or $ 9,458
in a family of three with two
children.