Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Neuman, Susan B., Celano, Donna
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ737982
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867180970117955584
author Neuman, Susan B.
Celano, Donna
author_facet Neuman, Susan B.
Celano, Donna
Neuman, Susan B.
Celano, Donna
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Knowledge Gap: Implications of Leveling the Playing Field for Low-Income and Middle-Income Children Neuman, Susan B. Celano, Donna Disadvantaged Youth Neighborhoods Library Networks Public Libraries Academic Achievement Library Services Low Income Groups Ethnography Middle Class Reading Skills This study examines children's uses of reading resources in neighborhood public libraries that have been transformed to "level the playing field." Through foundation funding (US$20 million), the public library system of Philadelphia converted neighborhood branch libraries into a technologized modern urban library system, hoping to improve the lives of disadvantaged children and their families by closing the achievement gap. Using a mosaic of ethnographic methodologies, four studies examined children's uses of library resources in low-income and middle-income neighborhood libraries, prior to renovations and technology, right after, and once the novelty had worn off a year later, for preschoolers, elementary, and teens. Results indicated that despite heavy library use across low-income and middle-income children, quality differentials in the way resources were used appeared at all age levels, prior to, immediately after, and stronger still following technology renovations. Taken together, these studies suggest equal resources to economically unequal groups did not level the playing field. Instead, it appeared to widen the knowledge gap between low-income and middle-income children. (Contains 10 tables and 5 figures.)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_EJ737982
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2006
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Knowledge Gap: Implications of Leveling the Playing Field for Low-Income and Middle-Income Children
Neuman, Susan B.
Celano, Donna
Disadvantaged Youth
Neighborhoods
Library Networks
Public Libraries
Academic Achievement
Library Services
Low Income Groups
Ethnography
Middle Class
Reading Skills
The Knowledge Gap: Implications of Leveling the Playing Field for Low-Income and Middle-Income Children Neuman, Susan B. Celano, Donna Disadvantaged Youth Neighborhoods Library Networks Public Libraries Academic Achievement Library Services Low Income Groups Ethnography Middle Class Reading Skills This study examines children's uses of reading resources in neighborhood public libraries that have been transformed to "level the playing field." Through foundation funding (US$20 million), the public library system of Philadelphia converted neighborhood branch libraries into a technologized modern urban library system, hoping to improve the lives of disadvantaged children and their families by closing the achievement gap. Using a mosaic of ethnographic methodologies, four studies examined children's uses of library resources in low-income and middle-income neighborhood libraries, prior to renovations and technology, right after, and once the novelty had worn off a year later, for preschoolers, elementary, and teens. Results indicated that despite heavy library use across low-income and middle-income children, quality differentials in the way resources were used appeared at all age levels, prior to, immediately after, and stronger still following technology renovations. Taken together, these studies suggest equal resources to economically unequal groups did not level the playing field. Instead, it appeared to widen the knowledge gap between low-income and middle-income children. (Contains 10 tables and 5 figures.)
title The Knowledge Gap: Implications of Leveling the Playing Field for Low-Income and Middle-Income Children
topic Disadvantaged Youth
Neighborhoods
Library Networks
Public Libraries
Academic Achievement
Library Services
Low Income Groups
Ethnography
Middle Class
Reading Skills
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ737982