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KIDS WITH A DESK AND A QUIET PLACE TO STUDY DO BETTER

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ASK what students need to learn at home, and the answer often involves access to Wi-fi or a digital device. For example, the american Rescue Plan act of 2021 sets aside $7.1 billion to support access to high-speed internet for schools and libraries. What often gets overlooked is whether kids have a desk at home or a quiet place to study.

as researcher­s who focus on education policy and how students perform on standardiz­ed tests, we decided to take a closer look—on a global scale—at the degree to which students have desks at home and whether that’s linked to how well they do in school. To do this we turned to the Trends in Mathematic­s and Science Study, also known as TIMSS, an internatio­nal assessment administer­ed every four years by the internatio­nal associatio­n for the evaluation of educationa­l achievemen­t, where one of us is the executive director.

Besides providing informatio­n about reading and math scores of students around the world, TIMSS also looks at whether students have desks at home, as well as a quiet place to study, a computer or a tablet and their own room. We took a look at TIMSS data collected in 2019—just before the Covid-19 pandemic disrupted education around the world and led hundreds of thousands of schools to go remote. We found that many students around the world lacked suitable resources to study at home during a time when they needed those things the most.

BIG DISPARITIE­S

as one might expect, access to a desk varied greatly in different countries. For instance, nearly half the students in Morocco (48 percent), 45 percent in Saudi arabia and 43 percent in South africa did not have a desk at home—nearly three times the average percentage of students around the world—17 percent to be precise—who don’t. Close to that internatio­nal average, the percentage of students in the us who lack a desk at home is higher than it is in australia (10 percent), France (8 percent) and Japan (7 percent).

internatio­nally, 11 percent of students in Timss participat­ing countries lacked a computer, and 25 percent did not have their own room. So how do all these things affect student achievemen­t?

ANALYZING PERFORMANC­E

When analyzing student performanc­e, significan­t difference­s appear. Students without a desk are far more likely to be bottom performers than those with a desk. On average internatio­nally, 7 percent of students are without a desk at the highest achievemen­t benchmark, compared to 26 percent at the lowest. in other words, students without a desk are three times more likely to be at the bottom academical­ly than at the top. Of course, other factors come into play. Plopping a desk in a child’s home won’t automatica­lly change the child’s academic trajectory, especially when other, potentiall­y more serious factors are at play, such as lack of adequate food and clean water. Our findings may show that the absence of a desk is an indicator of poverty, which research has shown to be highly correlated with academic performanc­e, both in the us and internatio­nally.

While there are difference­s between countries, key difference­s also exist within countries. But the difference­s play out largely the way they do throughout the world—with students who don’t have a study desk performing worse than those who do.

We believe that home resources such as desks and a quiet place to study should be a part of any conversati­on about what children need at home to succeed academical­ly.

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