Ķvlog

Student Achievement

The Sibling Effect: How Retaining Struggling Readers Impacts Brothers and Sisters

By Lydia McFarlane — August 09, 2023 3 min read
Photo from behind of a mother with her arms around her son and daughter who are both wearing school bookbags.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

An economist by training, David Figlio often conducts research on the cost effectiveness of education legislation and its impact on the students targeted by the new laws.

But, after studying a Florida reading retention policy, Figlio, an economics and education professor and provost at the University of Rochester, and his research team found that policies meant to target individual students can also have unexpected benefits for those students’ younger siblings.

“Just Read, Florida!” initiative, which was enacted in 2002. It requires students to reach a Level Two benchmark on the statewide reading test in order to start 4rth grade or they have to repeat 3rd grade. Once a student is retained, schools must provide extra support and resources to get them up to grade level by the end of their repeated year.

While normally a critic of retention policies, Figlio said he thinks an important aspect of Florida’s policy is the extra resources it provides for targeted students, such as being assigned to high-performing teachers, summer camp, individual reading plans, and intensive instruction.

“I actually tend to be pretty negative on the idea of just retaining students,” Figlio said. “I view this policy itself as more of investing targeted resources into struggling students as measured by low standardized test performance.”

In studying the students who were affected by this legislation and their siblings, the team found that the younger siblings improved their own reading skills by about one-third as much as their older brothers or sisters did, even though they were not themselves retained or targeted for extra help.

Big implications for education research?

Figlio said this has huge implications for education research in general.

“The biggest implication is that benefit-cost analyses of policies, if we’re looking at the effects only on the focal kid, are going to be understated,” Figlio said.

Although most siblings did get some spillover effects, Figlio and his team said the benefits were more pronounced for three specific groups of students: male students, students with learning disabilities, and those from families who recently immigrated to the United States.

While younger sisters did not reap many spillover effects, younger brothers did. Figlio said this may be because research has shown that males tend to be more sensitive to their environment than females are, meaning that boys were more likely to be affected by their older siblings’ retention than girls were.

“There have been a large number of studies of late showing that ... boys are just more sensitive to the good and the bad than girls are,” Figlio said. “Girls tend to be more resilient than the boys on average.”

For special education students, the larger spillover effect may be because parents of special education students are typically more involved in their students’ education, by nature of their children’s added special needs, and they will as a result tend to be more involved in all their children’s educations. Also, the retained student did not have to be in special education in order for the younger sibling to accrue some spillover effects. If either child was in special education, the younger sibling would get spillover effects.

“Parents of special needs students are already more tapped into their kid’s educational environment almost by definition than parents without special needs kids,” Figlio explained. “It would make sense ... [that] parental awareness and parental involvement is one of the reasons we have spillover effects within the family.”

Likewise, he added, “there’s a large literature that says recent immigrant families tend to be more involved in their kids’ schooling,” Figlio said. “Again, if this is a parental involvement story, then it stands to reason that recent immigrant families would be especially engaged in that regard.”

Figlio hopes that other researchers will take a page out of his book and observe the whole family when it comes to education policy analysis. By only focusing on the focal child, he believes the effects, both negative and positive, of any given policy, can be understated.

“I would like to see scholars ... look at siblings to try to start studying not only the effects of the individual kid who’s the focal kid but also the effects on siblings because I want to know, ‘Was this [Figlio’s research findings] dumb luck? Was this a fluke?’ or is this something that gets replicated over and over again,” he said.

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Teaching Webinar
Maximize Your MTSS to Drive Literacy Success
Learn how districts are strengthening MTSS to accelerate literacy growth and help every student reach grade-level reading success.
Content provided by 
College & Workforce Readiness Webinar How High Schools Can Prepare Students for College and Career
Explore how schools are reimagining high school with hands-on learning that prepares students for both college and career success.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
School Climate & Safety Webinar
GoGuardian and Google: Proactive AI Safety in Schools
Learn how to safely adopt innovative AI tools while maintaining support for student well-being. 
Content provided by 

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

Student Achievement Spotlight Spotlight on Unlocking Potential: How Interventions Transform Learning
This Spotlight explores how interventions can shape student outcomes, with a focus on supporting older students who struggle with reading.
Student Achievement Mounting Evidence Shows National Reading Scores Stuck at Historic Lows
Math performance has risen, but reading remains at pandemic-era levels, a new analysis shows.
3 min read
Third-grader Fallon Rawlinson reads a book at Good Springs Elementary School in Good Springs, Nev., on March 30, 2022. For decades, there has been a clash between two schools of thought on how to best teach children to read, with passionate backers on each side of the so-called reading wars. But the approach gaining momentum lately in American classrooms is the so-called science of reading.
Third-grader Fallon Rawlinson reads a book at Good Springs Elementary School in Good Springs, Nev., on March 30, 2022. Reading scores remain flat after the pandemic, even as scores grow in math—a subject in which performance was initially more affected.
Steve Marcus/Las Vegas Sun via AP
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Student Achievement Whitepaper
Progress Monitoring Resources to Support Student Growth
Progress monitoring is essential for effective MTSS. This toolkit offers valuable resources to help your team feel more confident analyzing data and making informed decisions about whether to continue, end, or extend interventions. Get the toolkit.
Content provided by Renaissance
Student Achievement High-Dosage Tutoring for 100K Kids: How a District Settled a Learning Loss Case
The nation's second-largest district agreed to tutoring and other measures to settle a case brought by parents during the pandemic.
4 min read
Rear view of mixed race teen schoolgirl using a laptop while having online video lesson with teacher, sitting at home.
iStock/Getty