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- Title
Welfare Reforms and the Cognitive Development of Young Children.
- Authors
Williamson, Deanna L.; Salkie, Fiona J.; Letourneau, Nicole
- Abstract
Purpose: To investigate whether the cognitive development of young children in poverty is affected by activities of their primary caregiver and by household income source, which are two components of family poverty experience that have been affected by recent welfare reforms. Methods: Bivariate and multivariate analyses were used to examine the relationships that caregiver activity, household income source, and family characteristics (family income adequacy, caregiver depressive symptoms, caregiver education) have with the cognitive development of 59 impoverished children less than three years old. Results: Of the three poverty experience variables included in the multivariate analysis, only employment as the exclusive source of household income had an independent relationship (positive) with children's cognitive development. Two of the family characteristics, income adequacy and caregiver education, also were associated with the children's cognitive score, and they were both better relative predictors than the employment-only income source variable, income adequacy was positively associated and caregiver education was negatively associated with children's cognitive development. Discussion: Although recent welfare reforms, in combination with economic growth and declining unemployment, have changed the poverty experience of young families by increasing the proportion that secure at least part of their income from employment, our study provides preliminary evidence that these reforms have made little difference for most young impoverished children. instead, our findings suggest that the cognitive development of young children is influenced as much by the actual amount of household income as by their parents' activity and source of income.
- Subjects
CHILD development; COGNITIVE development; DEVELOPMENTAL psychology; COGNITIVE learning; CHILD welfare; MULTIVARIATE analysis; MENTAL depression
- Publication
Canadian Journal of Public Health, 2005, Vol 96, Issue 1, p13
- ISSN
0008-4263
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/bf03404006