Daydreaming in kindergarten may cost children later in life in earning potential
CHICAGO » We all knew a few spacey kids in kindergarten who just couldn’t get their acts together.
You won’t be shocked to learn that they probably make less money as adults than the class overachievers.
But would you believe that the dreamy kids might also do worse in life than the class bully?
That’s one potential takeaway from a new study published in JAMA Pediatrics. The study compared kindergarten teachers’ assessments of low-income boys’ inattention, hyperactivity and aggression with their employment earnings at ages 35 to 36, based on their tax returns.
Researchers found that the boys who made the most money in their mid-30s were those who acted with empathy in kindergarten — helping, sharing, cooperating, inviting bystanders to join in activities and being a peacemaker in disputes.
But those who fared the worst weren’t the boys who disobeyed the teacher and bullied their classmates. It was the dreamy, inattentive boys who, the researchers estimated, could earn about $3,000 more a year — or nearly $71,000 over the course of a 40-year career — if they were just able to stay focused, concentrate on a task for a sustained period of time and persist through difficulties.
Research on how students succeed has long pointed to executive-functioning skills — selfregulation, planning, organization — as key to academic and eventual economic success.
But this is the first study, according to its authors, to make an explicit connection between so-called prosocial behaviors — like being a helper and a peacemaker — and higher lifetime earnings.
And, counterintuitively, it also shows that the antisocial behaviors teachers find most alarming — hyperactivity, disobeying, talking back and fighting — aren’t those likeliest to impact long-term success.
“We tried to control for IQ, adverse home conditions and the like, but when we unpacked the relationship between performance in kindergarten and later life success, it wasn’t so surprising that being inattentive led to not being able to keep a job,” said Daniel Nagin, a criminologist and statistician from Carnegie Mellon University’s Heinz College and a co-author of the study. “But … physical aggression wasn’t associated with lower income in the way that inattention was.”
Though this might seem hohum to those who don’t spend their day with dozens of kids under the age of 7, take it from me: This is an important finding. It offers insight to those of us working hard to train kindergartners well enough to graduate to a first-grade experience that will include sitting still to work for 90 minutes at a stretch, learning to read and write, and performing algebraic functions during math instruction.
As with any other individual research study, no matter how well constructed, it’s unwise to overgeneralize. This analysis was, after all, conducted on white, low-income boys in Montreal, Canada, who, presumably, were largely immune from the systemic racism and deep socioeconomic disparity that impact many elementary school students in the United States.
But it’s fascinating, noteworthy and maybe a little unsettling to reframe bullying, disobedient or aggressive behaviors in children as young as 5 or 6 as something other than strictly a lack of executive-function skills.
And, potentially, it’s hopeful to imagine that youngsters who exhibit such behaviors may have the capacity to channel their impulses toward some eventual good.
America’s entire education apparatus, however, will be upended if the venerated “dreamy and creative” students that sappy educational motivation posters valorize because they “march to the beat of their own drummer” turn out to not be the next Steve Jobs, but the kids that need the most worrying about — and appropriate intervention.