Early%20Years%20Policy:%20What%20Does%20Research%20Tell%20Us? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Early%20Years%20Policy:%20What%20Does%20Research%20Tell%20Us?

Description:

... from the National Institute for Early Education Research ... Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne & Lisa Markman (2005) ... London: Institute of Education, University of London. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:96
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 23
Provided by: sunt6
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Early%20Years%20Policy:%20What%20Does%20Research%20Tell%20Us?


1
Early Years Policy What Does Research Tell Us?
  • CASE and CMPO Conference on Family Background and
    Child Development, July 18, 2006
  • Jane Waldfogel
  • Columbia University CASE

2
Outline
  • I. What do we know from research about the two
    major types of early years policy parenting
    programs and early education programs?
  • II. What role does quality play and how can we
    measure it?
  • III. How do we know whether our policies are
    effective and how can local areas and programs be
    held accountable?

3
I. What do we know from research?
  • We would like to know how effective early years
    programs are in meeting the twin goals of policy
    (Childcare Bill)
  • o improving outcomes for all children
  • o narrowing gaps between disadvantaged and others
  • We care about a range of child outcomes including
  • a. health
  • b. cognitive development
  • c. social and emotional development
  • We also care about outcomes for parents
    (employment, gender equity) but the main focus
    here is on children.

4
Two main types of policy
  • Parenting programs
  • parent education (e.g. teaching parents to read
    w/child)
  • parent support (e.g. home visiting for new
    parents)
  • parent management training (e.g. training for
    parents of children with conduct disorders)
  • Early education programs
  • School based preschool programs
  • Center-based programs in the community
  • Other child care programs

5
Other program dimensions
  • Programs (whether parenting or early education)
    also vary by
  • Goals of intervention (to improve cognitive
    development, behavioral/social, educational,
    child maltreatment, health, crime)
  • Focus of intervention (child, parent, family)
  • Whether program is targeted, and if so, by what
    criteria
  • Age of child
  • Location of services
  • Services offered, whether services are
    individual/group
  • Intensity
  • Scale
  • Karoly et al., 2005.

6
What we know about parenting programs
  • Parenting matters a lot, particularly in early
    childhood.
  • However, the evidence is much weaker when it
    comes to the effectiveness of parenting programs.
  • This is important, because for parenting programs
    to be a good investment, we have to know that
    parenting matters and that programs change
    parenting and improve child outcomes.
  • Brooks-Gunn Markman, 2005 Desfarges, 2003 HM
    Treasury, 2005 Magnuson, 2004

7
Parenting programs (continued)
  • Parenting programs may change parents behavior,
    but evidence that parenting programs change child
    outcomes is less strong.
  • However, a few programs are exceptional
  • Parent education programs (such as Parents as
    Teachers and Reach Out and Read) can raise child
    test scores.
  • Universal home visiting programs for pregnant
    women and new mothers using trained nurses (Olds
    NFP) reduce child maltreatment and crime, and
    improve test scores and behaviour.
  • Parent management training for parents of
    children with conduct disorders
    (Webster-Stratton) improves childrens behaviour.
  • Aos et al., 2004 Karoly et al., 2005 Magnuson,
    2004 Nelson et al., 2003 Sweet Appelbaum,
    2004.

8
What we know from research about early education
programs
  • Here, the evidence base is much stronger.
  • Evidence from US and UK is consistent on 2
    points
  • school- or center-care increases childrens
    school readiness
  • higher-quality care is more effective than
    lower-quality care.
  • Shonkoff Phillips, 2000 Smolensky Gootman,
    2003 Waldfogel, 2004, 2006.

9
Early education programs (continued)
  • High-quality preschool programs produce
    substantial cognitive gains, particularly for
    disadvantaged (Currie, 2001 Karoly et al., 1998,
    2005 Waldfogel, 2002, 2006).
  • Positive results also found for Head Start (Puma
    et al, 2005) and Early Head Start (Love et al,
    2002) and for more typical preschool programs
    (NICHD ECCRN Duncan, 2003).
  • Some adverse effects of group child care on child
    health and concerns about safety, particularly in
    low-quality care (Meyers et al., 2004). But
    child care may also be protective, reducing
    physical discipline and domestic violence (Love
    et al., 2002 Magnuson Waldfogel, in press
    Puma et al., 2005).
  • Programs may also boost mothers education,
    employment, earnings (Brooks-Gunn et al., 2000
    Karoly et al., 1998).

10
Early education programs ECLS-K results
  • Preschool raises school readiness and lowers
    retention. Children who attended pre-K score
    better in reading (effect size .19 at entry, but
    .04 in spring of 1st grade) and are 25 less
    likely to be retained.
  • Effects are larger, and longer-lasting, for
    children in low-instruction schools (effect size
    for reading .46 at entry and .25 in 1st grade)
    and disadvantaged children (e.g. children whose
    families received welfare effect sizes .28 and
    .21). Larger effects also found for children
    with less-educated parents or language other than
    English.
  • But, longer hours in preschool also associated
    with more behaviour problems, except for children
    attending pre-K and K in same school.
  • Magnuson, Meyers, Ruhm, Waldfogel, 2004
    Magnuson, Ruhm, Waldfogel, in press.

11
Early education programs EPPE results
  • Children who attend preschool enter school at a
    cognitive advantage (effect sizes .30 to .45)
    (Charts E.3-E5).
  • The longer children had been in pre-school, the
    greater the advantage effect sizes for
    pre-reading, early number, and language range
    from .38 to .63 for those attending 2-3 or gt3
    years (Chart 4.1). Children who began pre-school
    at 2 were ahead of children who began at 3, and
    maintained that gain at school entry. This was
    not true for the few children who began before 2.
  • Children who attend pre-school also enter school
    with better social and behavioural development,
    except on dimension of antisocial or worried
    (effect size .10). Children who began pre-school
    earliest (at 2 or below) were the most antisocial
    or worried.
  • Children at risk of SEN, children for whom
    English is an additional language, and children
    from some ethnic minority groups gained the most
    from attending preschool.
  • Sammons, Sylva, Melhuish, Siraj-Blatchford,
    Taggart, Elliot, 2002, 2003.

12
EPPE results (continued)
  • The impact of child, family, and home environment
    factors is weaker at school entry than at 3 for
    some cognitive outcomes (pre-reading, early
    numbers) (Table 2.2), although not for social and
    behavioural outcomes.
  • There may be composition effects e.g. children
    made more progress in pre-reading if attending
    centres with more children from highly educated
    families.
  • Children also made more progress in
    higher-quality centers, but quality and
    effectiveness of care is uneven.

13
II. The role of quality
  • There is no doubt that quality matters.
  • Quebecs 5/day child care policy increased
    enrollment in mainly low-quality settings, with
    adverse effects for children (Baker, Gruber,
    Milligan, 2005 Waldfogel, 2005).
  • This contrasts with evidence from Argentinas
    kindergarten expansion (Berlinski, Galiani,
    Gertler, 2006) and pre K in US, where schools set
    high quality standards and children gain in
    school readiness (Barnett et al., 2005 Gormley
    Gayer, 2005 Gormley et al., 2005 Magnuson et
    al., in press).

14
But how to define and measure quality?
  • In parenting programs, two key aspects are
  • Trained staff who follow a specific curriculum
    (e.g. Olds)
  • Services delivered with sufficient intensity.
  • Karoly et al., 2005 Nelson et al., 2003 Olds et
    al., 2002 and 2004.

15
Quality in early education programs
  • Two key aspects (Currie Neidell, in press
    Karoly et al., 2005 Ruopp et al., 1979 Shonkoff
    Phillips, 2000 Smolensky Gootman, 2003) are
  • teacher education
  • child/teacher ratio
  • Other factors that matter
  • Intensity of service (Hill et al., 2003 Karoly
    et al.,2005).
  • Beginning early well-educated, trained, and
    compensated teachers small class sizes and high
    teacher-child ratios intensity and a clear
    focus on childrens learning (Galinsky, 2006).
  • Follow-on programming (this matters more when
    early intervention is less intensive CPC vs.
    Abecedarian).

16
III. Accountability how do we know whether
programs are effective and how can we hold local
areas and programs accountable?
  • Distinction between process and outcomes
  • Process has to do with what type of program is
    being delivered, with what intensity, to which
    children, etc.
  • Outcomes have to do with gains for children,
    ideally in comparison to a control group
  • In the US, interest in using outcomes data to
    track effectiveness and hold local areas and
    programs accountable (e.g. Robin Hood, Pew)
  • - Parallel with what is happening in education
    system.

17
Conclusions
  • Early years policies must address the twin
    challenge of improving outcomes for all children,
    and helping to close gaps between disadvantaged
    children and others.
  • We know from research that early education
    programs are effective at meeting these twin
    goals.
  • The evidence on parenting programs is weaker.
  • But, for both types of programs, quality matters.
  • So the challenge is how to deliver quality, and
    how to assess effectiveness on an ongoing basis,
    so that local areas and programs can be held
    accountable.
  • This may require tracking outcomes, as well as
    process.

18
References
  • Aos, Steve, Roxanne Lieb, Jim Mayfield, Marna
    Miller, Annie Pennucci (2004). Benefits and
    Costs of Prevention and Early Intervention
    Programs for Youth. Olympia, WA Washington State
    Institute for Public Policy. Available from
    www.wsipp.wa.gov.
  • Baker, Michael, Jonathan Gruber, K. Milligan
    (2005). Universal Childcare, Maternal Labor
    Supply, and Family Well-Being. Available from
    the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)
    at www.nber.org.
  • Barnett, W. Steven, Cynthia Lamy, Kwanghee Jung
    (2005). The Effects of State Prekindergarten
    Programs on Young Childrens School Readiness in
    Five States. Available from the National
    Institute for Early Education Research at
    www.nieer.org.
  • Berlinski, Samuel, Sebastian Galiani, Paul
    Gertler (2006). The Effect of Pre-Primary
    Education on Primary School Performance. IFS
    WP06/04.
  • Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne, Lisa Berlin, Alison
    Fuligni (2000). Early Childhood Intervention
    Programs What About the Family? In Jack
    Shonkoff Samuel Meisels (eds) Handbook of Early
    Childhood Intervention. 2nd edition. New York,
    NY Cambridge University Press.
  • Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne Lisa Markman (2005). The
    Contribution of Parenting to Ethnic and Racial
    Gaps in School Readiness. Future of Children
    15(1) 139-168.
  • Currie, Janet (2001). Early Childhood
    Intervention Programs What Do We Know? Journal
    of Economic Perspectives 15 213-238.
  • Currie, Janet Matthew Neidell (in press).
    Getting Inside the Black Box of Head Start
    Quality What Matters and What Doesnt?
    Economics of Education Review.

19
References (continued)
  • Desfarges, Charles with Alberto Abouchaar (2003).
    The Impact of Parental Involvement, Parental
    Support, and Family Education on Pupil
    Achievements and Adjustment A Literature Review.
    Research Report No. 433. London DfES.
  • Galinsky, Ellen (2006). The Economic Benefits of
    High-Quality Early Childhood Programs What Makes
    the Difference?. New York Families and Work
    Institute.
  • Gormley, William Ted Gayer (2005). Promoting
    School Readiness in Oklahoma An Evaluation of
    Tulsas Pre-K Program. Journal of Human
    Resources 40 533-558.
  • Gormley, William, Ted Gayer, Deborah Phillips,
    Brittany Dawson (2005). The Effects of Universal
    Pre-K on Cognitive Development. Developmental
    Psychology 41(6) 872-884.
  • Hill, Jennifer, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, Jane
    Waldfogel (2003). Sustained Effects of High
    Participation in an Early Intervention for
    Low-Birth-Weight Premature Infants.
    Developmental Psychology 39(4) 730-744.
  • HM Treasury (2005). Support for Parents The Best
    Start for Children. London HM Treasury.
  • Karoly, Lynn, Peter Greenwood, Susan Everingham,
    Jill Hoube, Rebecca Kilburn, Peter Rydell,
    Matthew Sanders, and James Chiesa (1998).
    Investing in Our Children What We Know and Dont
    Know about the Costs and Benefits of Early
    Childhood Interventions. Santa Monica RAND.
  • Karoly, Lynn, M. Rebecca Kilburn, Jill S.
    Cannon (2005). Early Childhood Interventions
    Proven Results, Future Promise. Santa Monica
    RAND.
  • Love, J.M., E. Eliason-Kisker, C. M. Ross, P.Z.
    Schochet, J. Brooks-Gunn, D. Paulsell (2002).
    Making a Difference in the Lives of Infants and
    Toddlers and Their Families The Impacts of Early
    Head Start. Washington, DC U.S. DHHS, ACF.

20
References (continued)
  • Magnuson, Katherine (2004). Parenting
    Interventions How to Spend the Marginal Dollar?
    Presentation to IPPR and HM Treasury Conference,
    March, 2004.
  • Magnuson, Katherine, Marcia Meyers, Christopher
    Ruhm, Jane Waldfogel (2004). Inequality in
    Preschool Education and School Readiness.
    American Educational Research Journal 41(1)
    115-157.
  • Magnuson, Katherine, Christopher Ruhm, Jane
    Waldfogel (in press). Does Prekindergarten
    Improve School Preparation and Performance?
    Economics of Education Review.
  • Magnuson, Katherine Jane Waldfogel (in press).
    Pre-School Enrollment and Parents Use of
    Physical Discipline. Infant and Child
    Development.
  • Meyers, Marcia, Dan Rosenbaum, Christopher Ruhm,
    Jane Waldfogel (2004). Inequality in Early
    Childhood Education and Care What do We Know?
    In Kathy Neckerman (ed). Social Inequality. New
    York Russell Sage Foundation.
  • Nelson, Geoffrey, Anne Westhues, Jennifer
    MacLeod (2003). A Meta-Analysis of Longitudinal
    Research on Preschool Prevention Programs for
    Children. Prevention Treatment 6. Available
    from http//journals.apa.org/prevention/volume6/pr
    e0060031.html
  • NICHD Early Child Care Research Network and Greg
    Duncan (2003). Modeling the Impacts of Child
    Care Quality on Childrens Preschool Cognitive
    Development. Child Development 74 1454-1475.

21
Reference (continued)
  • Olds, David, JoAnn Robinson, Ruth OBrien, Dennis
    Luckey, Lisa Pettit, Charles Henderson, Rosanna
    Ng, Karen Sheff, John Korfmacher, Susan Hiatt,
    Ayelet Tahmi (2002). Home Visiting by
    Paraprofessionals and by Nurses A Randomized,
    Controlled Trial. Pediatrics 110(3) 486-496.
  • Olds, David, JoAnn Robinson, Lisa Pettit, Dennis
    Luckey, John Holmberg, Rosanna Ng, Kathy Isacks,
    Karen Sheff, Charles Henderson (2004). Effects
    of Home Visits by Paraprofessionals and by
    Nurses Age 4 Follow-Up Results of a Randomized
    Trial. Pediatrics 114(6) 1560-1568.
  • Puma, M., S. Bell, R. Cook, C. Heid, M. Lopez
    (2005). Head Start Impact Study First Year
    Findings. Washington, DC U.S. Department of
    Health and Human Services, Administration for
    Children and Families.
  • Ruopp, Richard, Jeffrey Travers, Frederic Glantz,
    C. Coelen (1979). Children at the Center Final
    Report of the National Day Care Study.
    Cambridge, Mass. Abt Assoc.
  • Sammons, Pam, Kathy Sylva, Edward Melhuish, Iram
    Siraj-Blatchford, Brenda Taggart, Karen Elliot
    (2002). Measuring the Impact of Pre-School on
    Childrens Cognitive Progress over the Pre-School
    Period. Technical Paper 8a, The Effective
    Provision of Pre-School Provision (EPPE) Project.
    London Institute of Education, University of
    London.
  • Sammons, Pam, Kathy Sylva, Edward Melhuish, Iram
    Siraj-Blatchford, Brenda Taggart, Karen Elliot
    (2003). Measuring the Impact of Pre-School on
    Childrens Social/Behavioral Development over the
    Pre-School Period. Technical Paper 8b, The EPPE
    Project. London Institute of Education,
    University of London.

22
References (continued)
  • Shonkoff, Jack P. Deborah A. Phillips (eds)
    (2000). From Neurons to Neighborhoods The
    Science of Early Childhood Development.
    Washington, DC National Academy Press.
  • Smolensky, Eugene Jennifer Gootman (eds)
    (2003). Working Families and Growing Kids Caring
    for Children and Adolescents. Washington, DC
    National Academy Press.
  • Sweet, Monica Mark Appelbaum (2004). Is Home
    Visiting an Effective Strategy? A Meta-Analytic
    Review of Home Visiting Programs for Families
    with Young Children. Child Development 75(5)
    1435-1456.
  • Waldfogel, Jane (2002). Child Care, Womens
    Employment, and Child Outcomes. Journal of
    Population Economics 15 527-548.
  • Waldfogel, Jane (2004). Social Mobility, Life
    Chances, and the Early Years. CASEpaper 88.
    Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion, London
    School of Economics.
  • Waldfogel, Jane (2005). Family Work Arrangement
    and Child Outcomes. Paper presented at Expert
    Roundtable on Child Development, Ottawa, Canada,
    December 8-9, 2005.
  • Waldfogel, Jane (2006). What Children Need.
    Cambridge London Harvard University Press.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com