In language skills, 38 percent of children from lower-income families had very low scores versus 6 percent from higher-income families.
In math, 37 percent of children from lower-income families had very low scores compared to 9 percent in higher-income brackets.
"This study found that children from lower-income families entered school with significantly lower skills in all five major areas of development and learning compared to children in higher-income families," says Dr. Kelly Maxwell, who authored the study.
The study sampled more than 1,000 kindergarten students across the state. Maxwell says it is now up to policymakers to decide what specifically needs to be done to help lower-income children catch up.
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