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Early Development of Children
Table 35-2.  Children’s mean motor scale score at about 9 months of age and the percentage possessing specific motor skills, by child and family characteristics: 2001–02

    Percent
Child and family characteristic   Mean motor
scale score
Eye-hand
coordination
Sitting Prewalking Independent
walking
Balance

    Total 56 92 95 79 31 6
Age            
  Less than 10 months 54 91 93 73 18 1
  11–13 months 61 96 98 91 55 10
  14–22 months 70 99 100 98 89 43
Sex            
  Male 56 92 95 79 31 6
  Female 56 92 95 78 31 6
Race/ethnicity1            
  American Indian 59 94 96 83 42 12
  Asian/Pacific Islander 57 93 95 80 33 6
  Black 58 93 96 82 36 7
  White 56 92 95 78 30 6
  Hispanic 56 92 94 78 30 5
Birth weight2            
  Normal 57 93 95 79 31 6
  Low 55 90 93 72 24 4
  Very low 51 84 86 59 14 2
Poverty status            
  Poor 57 93 95 79 32 6
  Nonpoor 56 92 95 78 30 6
Mother’s education            
  Less than high school 57 93 95 79 32 6
  High school diploma or equivalent 57 93 95 79 32 6
  Some college 57 93 95 79 31 6
  Bachelor’s degree or higher 56 92 94 76 27 5
Family type            
  Two parents, with other siblings 56 92 94 77 29 5
  Two parents, without other siblings 57 93 95 79 31 6
  One parent, with other siblings 57 93 95 81 34 6
  One parent, without other siblings 58 94 96 83 36 7
Primary language spoken in the home            
  English 57 93 95 79 31 6
  Other than English 56 92 94 77 28 5
Number of family risk factors3            
  Zero 56 92 95 78 29 6
  One 57 93 95 80 33 6
  Two or more 56 92 95 79 31 6

1American Indian includes Alaska Native, Black includes African American, Pacific Islander includes Native Hawaiian, and Hispanic includes Latino. Race catagories exclude Hispanic origin unless specified .

2Normal birth weight is more than 5.5 pounds; low birthweight is more than 3.3 to 5.5 pounds; and very low birthweight is 3.3 pounds or less.

3Family risk factors include living below the poverty level, living in a household where the primary language was not English, having a mother whose highest education was less than a high school diploma or equivalent, and living in a single-parent household. See supplemental note 1 for more information on mother’s education and poverty.

NOTE: While the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Birth Cohort (ECLS–B) was designed to collect information on children about 9 months of age (i.e., 8 to 10 months), children were assessed as young as 6 months and as old as 22 months. Seventy-two percent of the children were between 8 and 10 months at the time of the assessment, and 84 percent were between 8 and 11 months. The assessment included here is the Bayley Short Form–Research Edition (BSF–R). For more information on the BSF–R and ECLS–B, see supplemental note 3.

SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Birth Cohort (ECLS–B), Restricted-Use File (NCES 2004–093), previously unpublished tabulation (January 2005).

 
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