By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, March 17, 2015
In contemporary America, “the conversation about race”
never ends. It fuels political debate and cable chatter, and practically every
week some new outrage — real or imagined — is fodder for the hungry maw of the
interminable conversation.
We don’t talk about class nearly as often, even though
the bifurcation of American life along class lines continues apace, with
distressing consequences for the state of the American Dream.
On the heels of conservative scholar Charles Murray’s
Coming Apart, a much-discussed study of class divisions in white America,
arrives Our Kids by the respected sociologist Robert Putnam of Bowling Alone
fame. It paints much the same picture as Murray, with an emphasis on how the
differences among high- and low-income parents affect the prospects of their
children.
Children of more affluent and better-educated parents
have substantial, and growing, advantages, beginning with the fact that they
are much more likely to grow up in stable homes.
Over and over, Putnam cites data showing college-educated
and high-school-educated parents sliding in different directions.
College-educated mothers delay childbearing about six
years later than they did 50 years ago, and thus tend to be better prepared;
high-school-educated moms have their kids slightly earlier than 50 years ago,
and a decade earlier than college-educated mothers.
Since the 1970s, nonmarital births have increased only a
little among college-educated women, while they have risen inexorably among
high-school-educated women.
Divorce has fallen among college-educated Americans since
1980, but continued to increase among the high-school-educated.
For all our obsession with race, class is asserting its predominance
in these family trends. “College-educated blacks,” Putnam writes, “are looking
more like college-educated whites, and less educated whites are looking more
like less educated blacks.”
In part because of these family differences, there is an
enormous, class-based parenting gap. “Increasingly,” according to Putnam,
“parents from different social classes are doing very different things to and
for their kids, with massively consequential results.”
More affluent parents tend to have the wherewithal to
engage in the intensive nurturing best-suited to giving their children the
social, emotional, and educational tools they will need to succeed later in
life.
“The ubiquitous correlation between poverty and child
development,” Putnam writes, “is, in fact, largely explained by differences in
parenting styles, including cognitive stimulation (such as frequency of
reading) and social engagement (such as involvement in extracurricular
activities).”
Again, Putnam demonstrates a growing divide. Family
dinners are an important vehicle for conversation between parents and children.
They had been declining as a practice since the 1970s, but the slide stopped
among college-educated parents in the mid-1990s and continued among
high-school-educated parents.
In the 1970s, parents of all classes were spending about
the same amount of time with their young kids. Now, college-educated parents
spend about 50 percent more time with their infant or toddler on developmental
activities like reading. Kids from poorer households make up the time spent
without their parents’ attention in front of a TV.
More affluent families have been spending more money on
child care and education for their children, while the lowest-income families
have been spending less.
The difference in educational achievement between
children from high- and low-income families has increased. “This class gap,”
Putnam writes, “has been growing within each racial group, while the gaps
between racial groups have been narrowing.” According to Putnam, a student’s
socio-economic status is now more important than test scores in predicting
whether an eighth-grader will graduate from college, a fact that should be a
fire bell in the night for anyone concerned about opportunity in America.
What accounts for all these changes, and what policies
might make a difference? Those nettlesome, weighty questions seem fit topics
for a national conversation. But forgive me, I know we’re supposed to be
talking about race. Pardon the interruption.
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