Abstract
Past research has documented compromised development for teenage mothers’ children compared to others, but less is known about
predictors of school readiness among these children or among teenage fathers’ children. Our multidimensional measures of high and low school readiness incorporated
math, reading, and behavior scores and parent-reported health. Using parent interviews and direct assessments from the Early
Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort, we predicted high and low school readiness shortly before kindergarten among children
born to a teenage mother and/or father (N ≈ 800). Factors from five structural and interpersonal domains based on the School Transition Model were measured at two
time points, including change between those time points, to capture the dynamic nature of early childhood. Four domains (socioeconomic
resources, maternal characteristics, parenting, and exposure to adults) predicted high or low school readiness, but often
not both. Promising factors associated with both high and low readiness among teen parents’ children came from four domains:
maternal education and gains in education (socioeconomic), maternal age of at least 18 and fewer depressive symptoms (maternal
characteristics), socioemotional parenting quality and home environment improvements (parenting), and living with fewer children
and receiving nonparental child care in infancy (exposure to adults). The findings preliminarily suggest policies that might
improve school readiness: encouraging maternal education while supplying child care, focusing teen pregnancy prevention efforts
on school-age girls, basic socioeconomic supports, and investments in mental health and high-quality home environments and
parenting.
predictors of school readiness among these children or among teenage fathers’ children. Our multidimensional measures of high and low school readiness incorporated
math, reading, and behavior scores and parent-reported health. Using parent interviews and direct assessments from the Early
Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort, we predicted high and low school readiness shortly before kindergarten among children
born to a teenage mother and/or father (N ≈ 800). Factors from five structural and interpersonal domains based on the School Transition Model were measured at two
time points, including change between those time points, to capture the dynamic nature of early childhood. Four domains (socioeconomic
resources, maternal characteristics, parenting, and exposure to adults) predicted high or low school readiness, but often
not both. Promising factors associated with both high and low readiness among teen parents’ children came from four domains:
maternal education and gains in education (socioeconomic), maternal age of at least 18 and fewer depressive symptoms (maternal
characteristics), socioemotional parenting quality and home environment improvements (parenting), and living with fewer children
and receiving nonparental child care in infancy (exposure to adults). The findings preliminarily suggest policies that might
improve school readiness: encouraging maternal education while supplying child care, focusing teen pregnancy prevention efforts
on school-age girls, basic socioeconomic supports, and investments in mental health and high-quality home environments and
parenting.
- Content Type Journal Article
- Pages 1-27
- DOI 10.1007/s12187-011-9126-2
- Authors
- Stefanie Mollborn, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO, USA
- Jeff A. Dennis, University of Texas of the Permian Basin, Odessa, TX 79762, USA
- Journal Child Indicators Research
- Online ISSN 1874-8988
- Print ISSN 1874-897X