--- In FairfieldLife@yahoogroups.com, "curtisdeltablues" <curtisdeltabl...@...> 
wrote:
<snip>
> Good intentions aren't enough. And panacea cures
> don't address the social ills that are dragging
> down these kids.

Poverty Goes Straight to the Brain
By Brandon Keim

Growing up poor isn't merely hard on kids. It might
also be bad for their brains. A long-term study of 
cognitive development in lower- and middle-class 
students found strong links between childhood 
poverty, physiological stress and adult memory. 

The findings support a neurobiological hypothesis for 
why impoverished children consistently fare worse 
than their middle-class counterparts in school, and 
eventually in life.

"Chronically elevated physiological stress is a 
plausible model for how poverty could get into the 
brain and eventually interfere with achievement," 
wrote Cornell University child-development 
researchers Gary Evans and Michelle Schamberg in a 
paper published Monday in the Proceedings of the 
National Academy of Sciences.

For decades, education researchers have documented 
the disproportionately low academic performance of 
poor children and teenagers living in poverty. Called 
the achievement gap, its proposed sociological 
explanations are many. Compared to well-off kids, 
poor children tend to go to ill-equipped and ill-
taught schools, have fewer educational resources at 
home, eat low-nutrition food, and have less access to 
health care. 

At the same time, scientists have studied the 
cognitive abilities of poor children, and the 
neurobiological effects of stress on laboratory 
animals. They've found that, on average, 
socioeconomic status predicts a battery of key mental 
abilities, with deficits showing up in kindergarten 
and continuing through middle school. Scientists also 
found that hormones produced in response to stress 
literally wear down the brains of animals.

Evans and Schamberg's findings pull the pieces of the 
puzzle together, and the implications are disturbing. 
Sociological explanations for the achievement gap are 
likely correct, but they may be incomplete. In 
addition to poverty's many social obstacles, it may 
pose a biological obstacle, too. 

"A plausible contributor to the income-achievement 
gap is working-memory impairment in lower-income 
adults caused by stress-related damage to the brain 
during childhood," they wrote....

Read more:

http://blog.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/03/poordevelopment.html

http://tinyurl.com/cqxxow
 


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