Project description
Home learning environment impact on children
Poor childhood education can lead to later-life health and income issues, and this pattern can perpetuate inequality within families. Children receiving limited interaction and reading time from their parents may encounter difficulties in school. To comprehensively gauge the impact of home learning, we must account for genetic factors or carry out a randomised controlled trial (RCT). Funded by the European Research Council, the InterGen project will explore how children’s home learning environments influences their language, reading and maths development. InterGen will collaborate with 3 000 twin families, using an online platform to evaluate the literacy and numeracy skills of both parents and children. Some 2 000 of these families will gain access to a platform designed to enhance home learning.
Objective
Poor educational achievement in childhood is a major risk factor for poor health and low income in adulthood. Poor educational outcomes tend to run in families, generating a cycle of inequality. Children whose parents talk and read less to them, tend to struggle in school. This parent-child association has been interpreted as a causal effect of parenting, but parents provide their children not only with a rearing environment, but also genes. We can only discover causal effects of the home learning environment (e.g. parent-child interactions, reading storybooks) if we control for genetics or run an RCT. My overarching aim is to discover which aspects of the home learning environment causally impact children’s language, reading, and math development.
INTERGEN will use a variety of innovative observational and experimental designs. We will employ existing rich datasets and collect novel data to triangulate four intergenerational (i.e. parent-child) designs. Using an online-learning platform, we will assess parent and child literacy and numeracy in 3000 twin families. In an RCT, 2000 of these families will get access to the online-learning platform to boost the home learning environment.
INTERGEN will:
1. Include gene-environment interplay in studying children’s motivation, literacy and numeracy development
2. Discover which features of the home learning environment have a causal impact on learning
3. Test the effectiveness of offering families an online-learning platform to practice literacy and numeracy
My training and established network in both education and genetics, combined with recent breakthroughs in statistical modelling, gene-finding work, and educational technology, make me uniquely suited to lead this timely project. INTERGEN has the ground-breaking opportunity to unravel the mechanisms underlying familial educational disadvantage. This will inform policy on how to target malleable causal mechanisms to ensure that all children can learn and thrive.
Fields of science (EuroSciVoc)
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Keywords
Programme(s)
- HORIZON.1.1 - European Research Council (ERC) Main Programme
Topic(s)
Funding Scheme
HORIZON-ERC - HORIZON ERC GrantsHost institution
1081 HV Amsterdam
Netherlands