Social and geographical inequalities in school starting age in Australia: a population data linkage study

ABSTRACT Objective In Australia’s most populous state, New South Wales (NSW), children must start school in the year they turn five, unless they are born between February-July, in which case they can delay starting until the year they turn six. Consequently, children start their first year of sch...

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Main Authors: Mark Hanly, Kathleen Falster, Rhonda Craven, Louisa Jorm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Swansea University 2017-04-01
Series:International Journal of Population Data Science
Online Access:https://ijpds.org/article/view/120
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spelling doaj-5983cb55271f429f844be9a347f5cd2f2020-11-24T22:00:52ZengSwansea UniversityInternational Journal of Population Data Science2399-49082017-04-011110.23889/ijpds.v1i1.120120Social and geographical inequalities in school starting age in Australia: a population data linkage studyMark Hanly0Kathleen Falster1Rhonda Craven2Louisa Jorm3University of New South WalesAustralian National UniversityAustralian Catholic UniversityUniversity of New South WalesABSTRACT Objective In Australia’s most populous state, New South Wales (NSW), children must start school in the year they turn five, unless they are born between February-July, in which case they can delay starting until the year they turn six. Consequently, children start their first year of school aged 4.5-6 years. This may translate into a wide range of developmental ability in the classroom in the first year of school and may impact on the magnitude of inequalities in longer-term educational outcomes. To inform how this policy currently translates into the demographic composition of NSW classrooms, this study aims to identify child, family, and area-level characteristics associated with the practice of delaying school entry. Approach The ‘Seeding Success’ study cohort (N=154,936) includes an almost complete population of children who started school in NSW in 2009 or 2012, and were born in NSW, identified by linking the Australian Early Development Census (AEDC) data to perinatal and birth registry data. Restricting this analysis to the 88,716 (57%) children born in February-July, we defined ‘delayed school entry’ as children who were eligible to start school the previous year (i.e. 2008 or 2011), but started in the AEDC data collection years (i.e. 2009 or 2012). Multilevel regression models were used to investigate child, family and area-level characteristics associated with delayed school entry. Results The prevalence of delayed school entry was 46% in the 2009 AEDC cohort and 47% in the 2012 AEDC cohort. Boys and children born closer to July were more likely to be delayed, as were children of older mothers. Prevalence of delay was similar in Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children, however, children of mothers born overseas were less likely to delay school entry compared to Australian-born mothers. Delaying was less common in major cities compared to remote and regional areas, and less common in socio-economically disadvantaged areas. Conclusion Children born in February-July who live in socio-economically disadvantaged urban areas are more likely to start school up to a year earlier than their peers, with poorly understood educational consequences. The current policy on school starting age results in an 18-month age range in classrooms, which may be challenging for teachers and confusing for parents who need to make a decision regarding their child’s ‘school readiness’. It is likely that access and affordability of childcare during the study period impacted on parent’s decisions about when to send their children to school.https://ijpds.org/article/view/120
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Hanly
Kathleen Falster
Rhonda Craven
Louisa Jorm
spellingShingle Mark Hanly
Kathleen Falster
Rhonda Craven
Louisa Jorm
Social and geographical inequalities in school starting age in Australia: a population data linkage study
International Journal of Population Data Science
author_facet Mark Hanly
Kathleen Falster
Rhonda Craven
Louisa Jorm
author_sort Mark Hanly
title Social and geographical inequalities in school starting age in Australia: a population data linkage study
title_short Social and geographical inequalities in school starting age in Australia: a population data linkage study
title_full Social and geographical inequalities in school starting age in Australia: a population data linkage study
title_fullStr Social and geographical inequalities in school starting age in Australia: a population data linkage study
title_full_unstemmed Social and geographical inequalities in school starting age in Australia: a population data linkage study
title_sort social and geographical inequalities in school starting age in australia: a population data linkage study
publisher Swansea University
series International Journal of Population Data Science
issn 2399-4908
publishDate 2017-04-01
description ABSTRACT Objective In Australia’s most populous state, New South Wales (NSW), children must start school in the year they turn five, unless they are born between February-July, in which case they can delay starting until the year they turn six. Consequently, children start their first year of school aged 4.5-6 years. This may translate into a wide range of developmental ability in the classroom in the first year of school and may impact on the magnitude of inequalities in longer-term educational outcomes. To inform how this policy currently translates into the demographic composition of NSW classrooms, this study aims to identify child, family, and area-level characteristics associated with the practice of delaying school entry. Approach The ‘Seeding Success’ study cohort (N=154,936) includes an almost complete population of children who started school in NSW in 2009 or 2012, and were born in NSW, identified by linking the Australian Early Development Census (AEDC) data to perinatal and birth registry data. Restricting this analysis to the 88,716 (57%) children born in February-July, we defined ‘delayed school entry’ as children who were eligible to start school the previous year (i.e. 2008 or 2011), but started in the AEDC data collection years (i.e. 2009 or 2012). Multilevel regression models were used to investigate child, family and area-level characteristics associated with delayed school entry. Results The prevalence of delayed school entry was 46% in the 2009 AEDC cohort and 47% in the 2012 AEDC cohort. Boys and children born closer to July were more likely to be delayed, as were children of older mothers. Prevalence of delay was similar in Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal children, however, children of mothers born overseas were less likely to delay school entry compared to Australian-born mothers. Delaying was less common in major cities compared to remote and regional areas, and less common in socio-economically disadvantaged areas. Conclusion Children born in February-July who live in socio-economically disadvantaged urban areas are more likely to start school up to a year earlier than their peers, with poorly understood educational consequences. The current policy on school starting age results in an 18-month age range in classrooms, which may be challenging for teachers and confusing for parents who need to make a decision regarding their child’s ‘school readiness’. It is likely that access and affordability of childcare during the study period impacted on parent’s decisions about when to send their children to school.
url https://ijpds.org/article/view/120
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