Let's Stop
Talking About The '30 Million Word Gap'
NPR: 6.01.2018 by Anya Kamenetz
Did
you know that kids growing up in poverty hear 30 million fewer words by age 3?
Chances are, if you're the type of person who reads a
newspaper or listens to NPR, you've heard that
statistic before.
Since
1992, this finding has, with unusual power, shaped the way educators, parents
and policymakers think about educating poor children.
But
did you know that the number comes from just one study, begun almost 40 years
ago, with just 42 families? That some people argue it contained a built-in
racial bias? Or that others, including the authors of a new study that calls
itself a "failed replication," say it's just wrong?
NPR
talked to eight researchers to explore this controversy. All of them say they
share the goal of helping poor kids achieve their highest potential in school.
But
on the issue of how to define either the problem, or the solution, there are,
well, very big gaps.
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