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Opening Arguments

It's a mystery

Today's well, duh research grant:

An Indiana University researcher is joining cohorts from three other universities in a study that will look at why children's grades often suffer when their families lose their homes to foreclosure.

IU assistant professor Ashlyn Aiko Nelson says previous research has shown that the experience of losing one's home and being forced to move can negatively impact a child's grades. But she says it's unclear why that's the case.

Unclear? Really? It's unclear why children's grades suffer when their families lose their homes? Well, let's just put on our thinking caps, shall we? How about the gnawing fear of losing a home and the abject terror of not knowing what the future might bring? Could that just possibly, maybe, perhaps, cause a kid to lose concentration a tiny little bit when he's staring at a multiple choice test?

This excursion into the obvious is being funded by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation to the tune of $800,000. Nice work if you can get it.

Comments

Harl Delos
Tue, 02/08/2011 - 11:41am

Suppose your parents won the lottery and decided to move from Glacier City, Indiana to a Hawaiian beachfront property. Don't you suppose that would affect their education as well.

I think the John D. and Catherine T. MacAuthur Foundation should pay me a minor fortune to investigate all the warm and sandy beaches in Hawaii. And maybe they could send me to Ipanema when I'm done in Hawaii, in order to see if the children of successful embezzers are similar affected as the lottery winners.

I'm not in any hurry to leave, but this is an important matter, and I note that there are flurries forecast for later this week....

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