Reynolds Arthur J, Richardson Brandt A, Hayakawa Momoko, Englund Michelle M, Ou Suh-Ruu
Institute of Child Development and Human Capital Research Collaborative, Humphrey School of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Institute of Child Development and Human Capital Research Collaborative, Humphrey School of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Pediatrics. 2016 Jul;138(1). doi: 10.1542/peds.2015-4587. Epub 2016 Jun 10.
To evaluate the impacts of the expansion of an evidence-based full- and part-day early childhood development program on multiple indicators of school readiness, attendance, and parental involvement for a large cohort of low-income children.
This study involved the end-of-preschool follow-up of a nonrandomized, matched-group cohort of 2630 predominantly low-income, ethnic minority children who enrolled in the Midwest Child-Parent Centers (CPC) or alternative preschools in the fall of 2012 in 31 schools in Chicago, Illinois. The program provides comprehensive education, family support, and health services. In the preschool component assessed in this study, 1724 children aged 3 to 4 years in all 16 Chicago centers enrolled in the program. The comparison group included 906 children of the same age who participated in the usual preschool services in 14 matched schools.
Relative to the comparison group who enrolled in the usual preschool services and adjusted for covariates, CPC participants had higher mean scores on all performance-based assessments of literacy (59.4 vs 52.4; P = .001), socioemotional development (57.0 vs 51.8; P = .001), and physical health (34.5 vs 32.1; P = .001). They also had higher ratings of parental involvement in school (5.3 vs 4.0; P = .04). Group differences also translated into higher rates of meeting national assessment norms. Program estimates were similar for children attending new and established CPCs and according to age, race/ethnicity, and family income status.
The findings show that expansion of the program to new schools and more diverse populations is feasible and effective in promoting school readiness skills and parental involvement.
评估一项基于证据的全日制和半日制幼儿发展项目的扩展,对一大群低收入儿童的入学准备、出勤率和家长参与度等多项指标的影响。
本研究对2630名主要为低收入少数族裔儿童的非随机匹配组队列进行了学前期末随访,这些儿童于2012年秋季在伊利诺伊州芝加哥市的31所学校就读于中西部儿童家长中心(CPC)或其他幼儿园。该项目提供全面的教育、家庭支持和健康服务。在本研究评估的学前部分,芝加哥所有16个中心的1724名3至4岁儿童参加了该项目。对照组包括906名同龄儿童,他们在14所匹配学校接受常规学前服务。
相对于参加常规学前服务并经协变量调整的对照组,CPC参与者在所有基于表现的读写能力评估(59.4对52.4;P = .001)、社会情感发展评估(57.0对51.8;P = .001)和身体健康评估(34.5对32.1;P = .001)中平均得分更高。他们在家长对学校参与度的评分上也更高(5.3对4.0;P = .04)。组间差异还转化为达到国家评估标准的更高比例。新项目和既有项目的儿童以及按年龄、种族/族裔和家庭收入状况划分的项目估计结果相似。
研究结果表明,将该项目扩展到新学校和更多样化的人群,在促进入学准备技能和家长参与方面是可行且有效的。