There is a well-established socioeconomic gradient in cognitive test scores for children. This gradient emerges at very early ages and there is also some evidence that it can widen as children age. We investigate this phenomenon with two longitudinal cohorts of Irish children who take such tests at ages ranging from 9 months to 17 years, using maternal education and equivalised income as our measure of socioeconomic resources. The gradient is observed from about 3 years and there is some tentative evidence that it widens as children get older. We have evidence on a wide range of tests and there is some evidence that the gradient is slightly stronger for tests involving crystalised as opposed to fluid intelligence. Exploiting the longit...
Given growing concerns about disadvantaged boys' achievement and disengagement from learning, this p...
The relationship between the incomes of the family a child is growing up in and the education level ...
We use data from the four sweeps of the UK Millennium Cohort Study of children born at the turn of t...
There is a well-established socioeconomic gradient in cognitive test scores for children. This grad...
Recent social and educational policy debate in the UK has been strongly influenced by studies that h...
Recent social and educational policy debate in the UK has been strongly influenced by studies which ...
The ‘Flynn effect’ describes the substantial and long-standing increase in average cognitive ability...
Recent social and educational policy debate in the UK has been strongly influenced by studies which ...
Disparities in children's expressive language by socio-economic status are evident early in childhoo...
The welfare of children is a key concern of Irish society and of government policy. A major new proj...
Papers in this Special Issue and elsewhere consistently find a strong relationship between children’...
Children’s development in the early years has been shown to be related to their success in later lif...
Research emphasising the importance of parenting behaviours and aspirations for child outcomes has b...
We investigate the accumulation of cognitive achievement using an indirect production function, esti...
We use data from the four sweeps of the UK Millennium Cohort Study of children born at the turn of t...
Given growing concerns about disadvantaged boys' achievement and disengagement from learning, this p...
The relationship between the incomes of the family a child is growing up in and the education level ...
We use data from the four sweeps of the UK Millennium Cohort Study of children born at the turn of t...
There is a well-established socioeconomic gradient in cognitive test scores for children. This grad...
Recent social and educational policy debate in the UK has been strongly influenced by studies that h...
Recent social and educational policy debate in the UK has been strongly influenced by studies which ...
The ‘Flynn effect’ describes the substantial and long-standing increase in average cognitive ability...
Recent social and educational policy debate in the UK has been strongly influenced by studies which ...
Disparities in children's expressive language by socio-economic status are evident early in childhoo...
The welfare of children is a key concern of Irish society and of government policy. A major new proj...
Papers in this Special Issue and elsewhere consistently find a strong relationship between children’...
Children’s development in the early years has been shown to be related to their success in later lif...
Research emphasising the importance of parenting behaviours and aspirations for child outcomes has b...
We investigate the accumulation of cognitive achievement using an indirect production function, esti...
We use data from the four sweeps of the UK Millennium Cohort Study of children born at the turn of t...
Given growing concerns about disadvantaged boys' achievement and disengagement from learning, this p...
The relationship between the incomes of the family a child is growing up in and the education level ...
We use data from the four sweeps of the UK Millennium Cohort Study of children born at the turn of t...