News Release

Researchers examine links between housing and child well-being with MacArthur Foundation grant

Seek links between childrens development and housing choices of low-income families

Grant and Award Announcement

Boston College

Rebekah Levine Coley, Boston College

image: Boston College developmental psychologist Rebekah Levine Coley and colleagues from Duke and Tufts will study the link between housing and the developmental well-being of children from low-income families with a $900,000 grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation MacArthur Foundation. view more 

Credit: Boston College

CHESTNUT HILL, MA (2/9/2011) – Boston College Associate Professor of Education Rebekah Levine Coley and colleagues from Duke and Tufts have been awarded a $900,000 grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation to examine the role that housing plays in the development of children from low-income families.

Coley, with Tufts University's Tama Levanthal and Duke University's Linda Burton, will study how housing influences children's well being between infancy and the middle school years. The funding for the project comes from the MacArthur Foundation's $25 million How Housing Matters to Families and Communities initiative.

"We're trying to understand how parents with limited economic resources make difficult choices about housing within the context of economic and social constraints," said Coley, a developmental psychologist at the Lynch School of Education. "Many low-income families have to make decisions between access to quality housing and access to decent medical care or to adequate food. We hope to learn more about how they make those decisions."

The role of housing in childhood development has never been studied in as comprehensive a fashion as proposed by the research team of Coley, Burton, an urban sociologist, and Leventhal, a developmental psychologist.

"There is a fair amount of research on housing contexts and housing policy," said Coley. "But relatively little of it has focused on children and how housing choices influence children's development. Of that research, none has studied housing and related contexts in a really comprehensive way."

The researchers will draw on data from the massive Three-City Study, which tracked 2,400 low-income children and their families from poor urban neighborhoods in Boston, Chicago and San Antonio between 1999 and 2006. Coley and Burton were part of the team that collected the Three-City Study data.

The researchers will be examining the trade-offs low-income families must make when considering housing options by weighing factors such as physical quality, crowding, stability, home ownership, subsidies and affordability. Where housing falls as a priority among other needs – such as neighborhood safety, food and medical care – is another point of inquiry. The team will ultimately develop a conceptual model that explains how children's physical, cognitive and socio-emotional development is influenced by housing.

Through the three-year project, the team plans to work closely with housing policy makers and professionals in the field in order to improve housing policy, build better supports for low-income families, and explain to a broad audience the connections between housing and issues such as nutrition, health care and employment.

For Coley, the project will dovetail with another study, which recently received $324,000 from the W.T. Grant Foundation. That research will examine the role housing plays in influencing the well being of low-income youth as they transition to adulthood, using Three-City Study data collected on individuals between the ages of 10 and 21.

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