Raisin test can predict if kid will do well in school

November 26, 2015

University of Warwick researchers used a raisin to predict if a toddler will do well in school by age eight.

The toddlers (aged 20 months) were given a raisin that was placed under an opaque cup within easy reach. After three training runs toddlers were asked to wait until they were told they could touch and eat the raisin. During the study it was found that those who were born very prematurely were more likely to take the raisin before the allotted time. In a follow on study the academics found that those who couldn’t inhibit their behavior as toddlers weren’t performing as well in school as their full-term peers seven years later.

Senior author, Professor Dieter Wolke, who is based at the University of Warwick’s Department of Psychology and at Warwick Medical School, said: “An easy, five-minute raisin game task represents a promising new tool for follow-up assessments to predict attention regulation and learning in preterm and term born children. The results also point to potential innovative avenues to early intervention after preterm birth.”

The study Preterm Toddlers’ Inhibitory Control Abilities Predict Attention Regulation and Academic Achievement at Age 8 Years will be published in the November issue of The Journal of Pediatrics.

The findings concluded that the lower the gestational age, the lower a toddler’s inhibitory control — and the more likely those children would have poor attention skills and low academic achievement at eight years old.

Julia Jaekel, lead author of the study and honorary research fellow at the University of Warwick and assistant professor of child and family studies at University of Tennessee, Knoxville, said: “This new finding is a key piece in the puzzle of long-term underachievement after preterm birth.”

The academics believe that being able to identify cognitive problems early on could result in the development of specialist, tailored education to help prevent these children underachieving at school and later on as adults.

Category: Technology & Devices, Top Story

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