November 5, 2001
Church keeps kids in school, study reports ___GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (RNS)--A study by a Michigan professor finds that church involvement helps low-income youth make progress in school. ___"Churches in poor and crime-ridden neighborhoods are often the primary functional communities in an otherwise dysfunctional world," wrote Mark Regnerus, director of the Social Research Center at Calvin College in Grand Rapids. ___"And for the youth who frequent them, such churches reinforce messages about working hard and staying out of trouble and orient them toward a positive future." ___Regnerus based his findings on an analysis of more than 9,700 responses to the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. ___In general, he found the importance of church attendance and religious faith was not much different among youth from a range of neighborhoods. He also learned church attendance generally helped teens stay on track in school. ___However, he noted, "As the level of poverty rises within the neighborhood, the relationship between church attendance and being on-track in school becomes more positive, indicating a uniquely protective influence of church attendance among youth in more impoverished neighborhoods when compared with their devout counterparts in more prosperous neighborhoods." ___Regnerus also studied the influence of church attendance on academic performance of youth in poor environments. ___"Church attendance indeed strengthens the educational progress among children in high-poverty neighborhoods," he said.
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