Benefits of high quality child care persist 30 years later

Friday, January 20th, 2012 | Author: Tracy

(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill) Adults who participated in a high quality early childhood education program in the 1970s are still benefitting from their early experiences in a variety of ways, according to a new study.

The study provides new data from the long-running, highly regarded Abecedarian Project, which is led by the FPG Child Development Institute at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Researchers have followed participants from early childhood through adolescence and young adulthood, generating a comprehensive and rare set of longitudinal data.

According to the latest study of adults at age 30, Abecedarian Project participants had significantly more years of education than peers who were part of a control group. They were also four times more likely to have earned college degrees; 23 percent of participants graduated from a four-year college or university compared to only 6 percent of the control group.

The findings were published online Wednesday (Jan. 18) in the journal Developmental Psychology.

Elizabeth Pungello, Ph.D., scientist at the FPG Institute and co-author of the study, said the educational attainment findings were especially noteworthy.

“When we previously revisited them as young adults at age 21, we found that the children who had received the early educational intervention were more likely to go to college; now we know they were also more likely to make it all the way through and graduate,” Pungello said. “What’s more, this achievement applied to both boys and girls, an important finding given the current low rate of college graduation for minority males in our country.”

Other benefits included that Abecedarian Project participants were more likely to have been consistently employed (75 percent had worked full time for at least 16 of the previous 24 months, compared to 53 percent of the control group) and less likely to have used public assistance (only 4 percent received benefits for at least 10 percent of the previous seven years, compared to 20 percent of the control group). They also showed a tendency to delay parenthood by almost two years compared to the control group. Project participants also appeared to have done better in relation to several other social and economic measures (including higher incomes), but those results were not statistically significant.

Of the 111 infants originally enrolled in the project (98 percent of whom were African-American), 101 took part in the age 30 follow-up.

“Being able to follow this study sample over so many years has been a privilege,” said Frances Campbell, Ph.D., senior scientist at the institute and lead author of the study. “The randomized design of the study gives us confidence in saying that the benefits we saw at age 30 were associated with an early childhood educational experience.”

Craig Ramey, Ph.D., professor and distinguished research scholar at the Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute and study co-author, said the findings have powerful implications for public policy.

“I believe that the pattern of results over the first 30 years of life provides a clearer than ever scientific understanding of how early childhood education can be an important contributor to academic achievement and social competence in adulthood,” Ramey said. “The next major challenge is to provide high quality early childhood education to all the children who need it and who can benefit from it.”

The Abecedarian Project was a carefully controlled scientific study of the potential benefits of early childhood education for children from low-income families who were at risk of developmental delays or academic failure. Participants attended a full-time child care facility that operated year-round, from infancy until they entered kindergarten. Throughout their early years, the children were provided with educational activities designed to support their language, cognitive, social and emotional development. Follow-up studies have consistently shown that children who received early educational intervention did better academically, culminating in their having greater chance of adult educational attainment.

The study is titled “Adult Outcomes as a Function of an Early Childhood Educational Program: An Abecedarian Project Follow-up.” Other co-authors were Oscar A. Barbarin, Ph.D., from Tulane University; Joseph J. Sparling, Ph.D., from UNC and the University of Melbourne, Australia; Margaret Burchinal, Ph.D., Yi Pan, Ph.D., and Barbara H. Wasik, Ph.D., all from UNC; and Kirsten Kainz, Ph.D., who was at UNC at the time of the study and is now with the Strategic Education Research Partnership in Washington, D.C.

Study link: http://psycnet.apa.org/psycinfo/2012-00549-001/ (subscription required)

Abecedarian Project website: www.fpg.unc.edu/~abc
FPG Child Development Institute website: www.fpg.unc.edu

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Web-based Supports for QRIS: The Pennsylvania Experience

Friday, October 28th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

The QRIS National Learning Network and the BUILD Initiative are hosting a webinar, Web-based Supports for QRIS: The Pennsylvania Experience, on November 14th at 3:00 PM (ET).

Learn how Pennsylvania plans to use a web-based platform to help early care and education programs successfully participate in Keystone Stars, the state quality rating and improvement system (QRIS).

Over the past two years, Pennsylvania early care and education leaders have worked collaboratively to create a web-based platform aimed at helping early care and education providers work smarter. The platform includes links to a host of cost-saving opportunities, administrative tools and templates, an automated child management and billing software specifically designed to meet PA subsidy rules, marketing resources, an on-line staffing service, opportunities for networking and more.

A new module, designed to help providers identify and link to the tools and resources they need to succeed in Keystone Stars QRIS system, is now under development. This webinar will demonstrate the platform, describe benefits to participating providers, and discuss the many ways web-based technologies can be used to help QRIS participants, as well as the Technical Assistance staff that support them, work more effectively and efficiently.

Registration and Sign-Up: Register for this webinar. Call-in instructions will be e-mailed to you after you register. In order to maximize the value of the webinar, they invite you to send questions and topics in advance of the call, and ask that you use the registration form to do so.

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Do Middle Class Children Benefit from High Quality Early Education?

Thursday, September 15th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

The eye on early education blog addresses this question. Irene Sege writes:

Much of the research on the long-term effects of high-quality early education has focused on children from low-income families. What about children from middle class families? A new working paper suggests that both low-income and middle class children who attended a high-quality pre-kindergarten program will experience greater earnings as adults, and the projected increase in dollar amounts is similar for both groups of children.

Read the post to get the whole story.

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Higher Quality Child Care for Struggling Working Families

Wednesday, July 20th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

North Carolina General Assembly members took an important step to raising the quality of child care for working families who receive help paying for early care and learning. The FY2011-12 Budget includes a special provision that prohibits, with some exceptions, subsidy payments to non-licensed child care homes and one and two star licensed programs. Specifically, the provision says:

10.7.(g) The Division of Child Development and Early Education (DCDEE) shall adopt policies that improve the quality of childcare for subsidized children. The DCDEE shall phase in a new policy in which child care subsidies will be paid, to the extent possible, for child care in the higher quality centers and homes only. The DCDEE shall define higher quality, and subsidy funds shall not be paid for one- or two-star-rated facilities. For those counties with an inadequate number of three-, four-, and five-star-rated facilities, the DCDEE shall establish a transition period that allows the facilities to continue to receive subsidy funds while the facilities work on the increased star ratings. The DCDEE may allow exemptions in counties where there is an inadequate number of three-, four-, and five-star-rated facilities for nonstar-rated programs, such as religious programs.

The Division of Child Development and Early Education has issued Subsidy Policy Guidelines for the new provision. Effective August 1, 2011, non-licensed child care providers can no longer enroll new children who are approved for subsidized child care services. Payment will continue for the children already enrolled and receiving care.

Download the DCDEE Subsidy Policy Guidelines.

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More Stars, Higher Quality Child Care, Cultivates Productive Citizens of North Carolina

Thursday, February 03rd, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

More research that shows the relationship between high quality care  and child outcomes. The University of North Carolina-Greensboro has a new fact sheet documenting research that demonstrates North Carolina’s child care system supports working families and economic development. Highlights include:

Recent Study Validated 4 and 5 Star Centers Provide Higher Quality Child Care

  • Children of all age groups experienced significantly higher quality learning environments and received more appropriate instructional and emotional support in 4 and 5 star centers compared to their peers in centers with 1 to 3 stars.

Research Conducted in North Carolina indicates High Quality Child Care is Less Stressful and Fosters Cognitive and Emotional Skills that Prepare Children for School and to be Contributing Citizens of North Carolina.

  • Children had more positive learning experiences and were more engaged in learning activities in higher quality child care.
  • Young children demonstrated more advanced cognitive and social skills in higher quality child care.
  • Preschoolers in classrooms with more appropriate instructional and emotional support from teachers had lower stress levels; whereas preschoolers with less instructional and emotional support had higher stress levels with abnormal physiological changes in stress hormones.

More Stars, Higher Quality Child Care, Cultivates Productive Citizens of North Carolina

  • Child care programs mold brain architecture with 90% of the brain developing during the first 3 years of life.
  • Investments in young children yield the greatest economic return to the state.
  • The cognitive, social, and emotional outcomes of young children, resulting from the quality of their child care experiences, defines North Carolina’s future workforce and economy.

Download the fact sheet.

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Secretary Duncan on Early Learning and Parent and Community Involvement

Thursday, January 13th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

Secretary Arne Duncan talks about the importance of early childhood education, and he calls on parents and citizens to get involved and “be part of the solution” in this January 7, 2011, video (via www.ed.gov).

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Increase Investments in ECE for Economic Growth

Wednesday, December 01st, 2010 | Author: Smart Start

Early childhood education and quality child care are among the top investments that should be increased to create the foundation for long-run economic growth according to a new report.

Our Fiscal Security, a collaborative effort of The Century Foundation, Demos and the Economic Policy Institute (EPI), today released Investing in America’s Economy: A Budget Blueprint for Economic Recovery and Fiscal Responsibility. This Blueprint is a detailed roadmap to immediate investments in job creation while addressing the nation’s long-run fiscal challenges.

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Understanding Child Care Quality

Monday, August 23rd, 2010 | Author: Smart Start

Early care and education can prepare children for school, but while some preschool and child care programs do an excellent job, others are inadequate and some may even harm healthy development. This study focuses on child care center directors to better understand why there is so much variation, and how public initiatives can better help poor-quality programs improve. Using data from in-depth interviews and classroom observations, the research considers how various factors—including director and program characteristics, market forces, and federal state and local policies—are associated with each other, director decision making, and program quality.

This is the abstract from The Urban Institute’s Understanding Quality in Context: Child Care Centers, Communities, Markets, and Public Policy, by Monica Rohacek, Gina Adams, and Ellen Kisker.

Download the report.

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