Chapter 10
We have a chapter on each of these five types of expe-
rience. The question is how they affect the three main di-
mensions of child development: emotional, behavioral, and
intellectual. We measure these dimensions as shown on the
outcome- age- measure grid.
Outcome Age Measure
Emotional 16, 11
5
Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire,
average of replies by mother and child
Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire,
mother- assessed
Behavioral 16, 11, 5 Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire,
mother- assessed
Intellectual 16
11
5
General Certificate of Secondary Education
(GCSE) points
National curriculum test score (often
referred to as SATs)
Local school entry assessment
In the next five chapters we always take the outcomes in
this order— beginning with what is intrinsically the most
important, which is the emotional well- being of the child.
And we look at how, other things equal, it is affected by the
specific experience that is the subject of the chapter. Need-
less to say, outcomes at 5 have to be explained by experi-
ences up to 5; outcomes at 11 by experiences up to 11; and
so on. This applies to every table.
Poverty and Child Development
So how are children affected if their parents are poor? We
measure income by the log of income per adult- equivalent