Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Science of Learning Institute, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2021 Jan 9;21(1):108. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-10119-3.
Home-based interventions have potential for improving early child development (ECD) in low-resource settings. The design of locally acceptable strategies requires an in-depth understanding of the household context. In this formative research study, we aimed to characterize the home play and learning environments of children 6-23 months of age from low-income households in peri-urban Lima, Peru.
Drawing on the developmental niche framework, we used quantitative and qualitative methods to understand children's physical and social settings, childcare practices, and caregiver perspectives. We conducted interviews, unstructured video-recorded observations, and spot-checks with 30 randomly selected caregiver-child dyads, 10 from each child age group of 6-11, 12-17, and 18-23 months of age, as well as key informant interviews with 12 daycare instructors. We analyzed the data for key trends and themes using Stata and ATLAS.ti and employed an adapted version of the Indicator of Parent-Child Interaction to evaluate the observations.
Children's social settings were characterized by multi-generational homes and the presence of siblings and cousins as play partners. Access to books and complex hand-eye coordination toys (e.g., puzzles, building blocks) in the home was limited (30.0 and 40.0%, respectively). Caregivers generally demonstrated low or inconsistent levels of interaction with their children; they rarely communicated using descriptive language or introduced novel, stimulating activities during play. Reading and telling stories to children were uncommon, yet 93.3% of caregivers reported singing to children daily. On average, caregivers ascribed a high learning value to reading books and playing with electronic toys (rated 9.7 and 9.1 out of 10, respectively), and perceived playing with everyday objects in the home as less beneficial (rated 6.8/10). Daycare instructors reinforced the problems posed by limited caregiver-child interaction and supported the use of songs for promoting ECD.
The features of the home learning environments highlighted here indicate several opportunities for intervention development to improve ECD. These include encouraging caregivers to communicate with children using full sentences and enhancing the use of everyday objects as toys. There is also great potential for leveraging song and music to encourage responsive caregiver-child interactions within the home setting.
家庭干预在资源匮乏的环境中具有改善儿童早期发展(ECD)的潜力。设计可被当地接受的策略需要深入了解家庭环境。在这项形成性研究中,我们旨在描述秘鲁利马周边城市低收入家庭 6-23 个月大的儿童的家庭游戏和学习环境。
我们借鉴发展小生境框架,采用定量和定性方法来了解儿童的物质和社会环境、育儿实践和照顾者的观点。我们对 30 个随机选择的照顾者-儿童对进行了访谈、非结构化的视频记录观察和现场检查,每个儿童年龄组 6-11、12-17 和 18-23 个月各 10 对,还对 12 名日托教师进行了关键知情人访谈。我们使用 Stata 和 ATLAS.ti 分析数据中的主要趋势和主题,并采用经过修改的亲子互动指标评估观察结果。
儿童的社会环境以多代同堂家庭以及兄弟姐妹和表亲作为玩伴为特征。家中书籍和复杂手眼协调玩具(如拼图、积木)的获取受到限制(分别为 30.0%和 40.0%)。照顾者与子女的互动通常较低或不一致;他们很少使用描述性语言与孩子交流,或在游戏中引入新颖、刺激的活动。给孩子读书和讲故事并不常见,但 93.3%的照顾者每天都给孩子唱歌。平均而言,照顾者认为读书和玩电子玩具具有很高的学习价值(分别评为 10 分中的 9.7 分和 9.1 分),而认为家中日常物品的玩耍益处较小(评为 6.8/10 分)。日托教师强调了照顾者与子女互动有限所带来的问题,并支持使用歌曲来促进 ECD。
这里强调的家庭学习环境特征表明有几个机会可以开展干预措施来改善 ECD。这些措施包括鼓励照顾者用完整的句子与孩子交流,并增强日常用品作为玩具的使用。利用歌曲和音乐在家庭环境中鼓励照顾者与子女的互动也具有很大的潜力。