From John Ray's shorter notes
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27/11/2019
Children who start school later gain advantage, new study showsThe paper underlying this report does not yet appear to be online but the Centre seems very Leftist so the research is unlikely to be very rigorous.Even the report below does however reveal a lack of rigour. It is apparently based on the nonsensical "all men are equal" dogma. No attempt is made to take account of student IQ. High IQ students have often been shown to thrive when enrolled early and the usual squawk about their social fitness has been shown to be a snark. Smart kids are in general better socially as well as academicallySo the study tells us nothing certain. There were presumably a number of low IQ students in the sample who would benefit from a late start. So the finding of an overall benefit from a late start could be entirely a product of the low IQ element in the sample. How students of around average IQ fare is simply not addressedChildren who are held back and start school later than their peers gain an advantage that is still felt up to six decades later, a new study shows.They are more self-confident, resilient, competitive and trusting, which tends to be associated with economic success.The analysis of 1007 adults aged between 24 and 60 illustrates the “potential adverse effect of school entry rules,” lead author Lionel Page from the University of Technology, Sydney said.“Our findings indicate that school entry rules influence the formation of behavioural traits, creating long-lasting disparities between individuals born on different sides of the cut-off date,” he said.School starting ages vary between Australian states. In Victoria, children starting school must turn five by April 30 in the year they start school, whereas in Queensland and Western Australia the cut-off is June 30. In South Australia,, they must be five by May 1 and in Tasmania they must be five by January 1.Dr Page said the study’s findings suggested the relative age at school had an impact on people’s success in adulthood.“We find that participants who were relatively old in school exhibit higher self-confidence about their performance at an effort task compared to those who were relatively young,” he said.“Moreover, they declare being more tolerant to risk in a range of real-life situations and trusting of other people in social interactions.“Taken together, this set of results offers important insights on the long-term effects of relative age at school on behavioural traits.”The new study was published by the Life Course Centre, a joint research project between the federal government and the University of Queensland, the University of Sydney, the University of Melbourne and the University of Western Australia.It involved adults from Queensland, Tasmania, Victoria and Western Australia.The findings come as a UNSW study found a quarter of students are held back so they start school when turning six, not when they turn five.
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