Page:1965 Moynihan Report.pdf/43

 {|cellspacing=0
 * + Percent of Nonwhite Males Enrolled in School, by Age and Presence of Parents, 1960
 * | Age
 * | Both parents present
 * | One parent present
 * | Neither parent present
 * | 41.7
 * | 44.2
 * | 34.3
 * | 79.3
 * | 78.7
 * | 73.8
 * | 96.1
 * | 95.3
 * | 93.9
 * | 96.2
 * | 95.5
 * | 93.0
 * | 91.8
 * | 89.9
 * | 85.0
 * | 78.0
 * | 72.7
 * | 63.2
 * | 46.5
 * | 40.0
 * | 32.3
 * colspan=4 |
 * }
 * | 91.8
 * | 89.9
 * | 85.0
 * | 78.0
 * | 72.7
 * | 63.2
 * | 46.5
 * | 40.0
 * | 32.3
 * colspan=4 |
 * }
 * | 40.0
 * | 32.3
 * colspan=4 |
 * }
 * }

grades at the lower SES [social class] level appears, and in no case is there a reversal of this trend: for males, females, and the combined group, the IQ’s of children with fathers in the home are always higher than those who have no father in the home."

The authors say that broken homes "may also account for some of the differences between Negro and white intelligence scores."

The scores of fifth graders with fathers absent were lower than the scores of first graders with fathers absent, and while the authors point out that it is cross sectional data and does not reveal the duration of the fathers’ absence, "What we might be tapping is the cumulative effect of fatherless years."

This difference in ability to perform has its counterpart in statistics on actual school performance. Nonwhite boys from families which both parents present are more likely to be going to school than boys with only one parent present, and enrollment rates are even lower when neither parent is present.

When the boys from broken homes are in school, they do not do as well as the boys from whole families. Grade retardation is higher when only one parent is present, and highest when neither parent is present.

The loneliness of the Negro youth in making fundamental decisions about education is shown in a 1959 study of Negro and white dropouts in Connecticut high schools.

Only 29 percent of the Negro male dropouts discussed their decision to drop out of school with their fathers, compared with 65 percent of the white males (38 percent of the Negro males were from broken homes), In fact, 26 percent of the Negro males did not discuss this major decision in their lives with anyone at all, compared with only 8 percent of white males.

A study of Negro apprenticeship by the New York State Commission Against Discrimination in 1960 concluded:

"Negro youth are seldom exposed to influences which can lead to apprenticeship. Negroes are not apt to have relatives, friends, or neighbors in skilled occupations, Nor are they likely to be in secondary schools where they receive encouragement and direction from alternate role models. Within the minority community, skilled Negro 'models' after whom the Negro youth might pattern himself are rare, while substitute sources which could provide the direction, encouragement, resources, and information needed to achieve skilled craft standing are nonexistent."