Carol L. McAllister, Tammy L. Thomas, Patrick C. Wilson, Beth L. Green
Racial differences in school readiness are a form of health disparity. By examining, from the perspective of low-income minority families participating in an Early Head Start study, community and policy environments as they shape and inform lived experiences, we identified several types of social and economic dislocation that undermine the efforts of parents to ready their children for school. The multiple dislocations of community triggered by housing and welfare reform and "urban renewal" are sources of stress for parents and children and affect the health and development of young children, Our findings suggest that racial differences in school readiness result not from race but from poverty and structural racism in American society. {Am J Public Health. 2009,99: 205-210. doi:10.2105/AJPH. 2005.068569) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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