Hi Moises. how are you doing? Hopefully all is well. My name is - TopicsExpress



          

Hi Moises. how are you doing? Hopefully all is well. My name is Cory Greene and I am a first year student in a psychology doctoral program at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. My mentor and colleagues Michelle Fine and Sonia Sanchez are involved in some research in Cali on how instructional time is used or wasted across SES and reading your articles hours after interviewing hundreds of teachers and students we believe and agree that the consequences of being poor is extremely hard to document because it often lives under the skin of the bodies of the poor. In short, in your article you make reference to a list of research and researchers with explains the effects of of being poor on health. I tried to search names listed in the articles to find their work but could not find a trail and wanted to know if you would or could assist me in retrieving the original work you cited in the Times piece. Here are some names and research I would really love to further read Robert Sapolsky, Princeton researcher calculated that socioeconomic and demographic factors, not genetics, accounted for 70 to 80 percent of that difference. The single greatest contributor was income, which explained more than half the disparity, Bruce McEwen, scientists at Carnegie Mellon, Peter Gianaros, Martha Farah, and Elizabeth H. Bradley just to name a few. We would really love the dive deeper into this topic and its connection to education. Thanks! Hope to hear from you soon. Peace Cory
Posted on: Fri, 09 Aug 2013 15:53:53 +0000

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