Browsing by Subject "Early childhood education"
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Item Long-term effects of Head Start enrollment on adulthood educational attainment and economic status: a Propensity Score Matching approach.(2009-06) Ju, EunsuIn 1965, the Head Start program was introduced as part of War on Poverty. There was a hope that intergenerational transmission of poverty could be broken down by a comprehensive preschool program for low income children and their families. Since then, a number of studies have explored the impact of the program. The majority of those studies have focused on cognitive development and educational outcomes, and they generally suggest that the program produces short-term effects, but that most of them disappear in the long-term. However, most previous studies suffered from comparability problems (i.e. different background characteristics) between program participants and non-participants. Further, although the main purpose of the program was to reduce poverty in the long run, confirmation of the idea has been almost ignored from the research for the last 40-plus years. The main purpose of this study is to conduct a more rigorous evaluation in regard to the long-term effects of the Head Start participation on adulthood educational attainment and economic status (as measured by personal earned income, the family income to poverty ratio, and welfare dependency). This study utilized data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) from 1970 to 2005. To examine the effects of Head Start participation on adulthood income, a total of 1,765 young adults (aged 19 to 35 in 2005) were selected from the original PSID sample: 161 with long-term Head Start participation, 171 with short-term Head Start participation, 611 with other preschool participation, and 822 with no preschool participation. Propensity Score Matching (PSM) analysis was employed to control preexisting differences that might have an influence on preschool experience. To ensure whether the findings are consistent regardless of how control groups are matched, four matching models were examined: one-to-one matching without replacement, one-to-one matching with replacement, two-nearest neighborhood matching, and radius matching. Using the matched samples, a series of multivariate analyses were conducted: ordered logistic regression for educational attainment, Tobit analysis for personal earned income, OLS regression for family income to poverty ratio, and logistic regression for welfare dependency. To control the influence of other factors, a variety of variables at the community, family, and child levels were also included in the analyses. Most of the pre-existing differences between groups were sufficiently controlled by the PSM. According to the results of the following multivariate analyses, Head Start provided sizeable gains to its participants in terms of educational attainment if they attended the program at least one year. Long-term Head Starters were more likely to have higher level of educational attainment by approximately 1.5 to 2 times than no preschool children, 2 to 3.2 times than other preschool children, and 1.9 to 2.1 times than short-term Head Starters. However, no significant effects were found among short-term Head Start participants. Regarding the effects on economic status, long-term Head Start participation had indirect effects on personal earnings and family income to poverty ratio through higher educational attainment as compared to short-term Head Start participation or no preschool experience. However, the effects on welfare dependency were not clear. Although some studies have questioned the long-term effects of Head Start participation, this study confirmed that Head Start had provided long lasting effects to its participants on their adulthood educational attainment and economic status. Consequently, more efforts should be made to minimize the barriers that interfere for low income children to attend the program. The programs’ coverage should be expanded and the quality of the program increased to reduce intergenerational poverty.Item Understanding standards-based reform in early childhood education: an exploratory study of implementation(2013-05) Rader, Shannon NatashaStandards-based reform has traditionally focused on K-12 educational systems, but there is growing evidence that it is now affecting early childhood programs. While it is increasingly apparent that standards-based reform has arrived in early childhood, there is a significant gap in our understanding of how these policies are being implemented in early childhood programs or the resulting effects. This study adds to the literature by investigating how early childhood program staff, including administrators, professional development staff, and teachers, make sense of standards-based reform. This study provides a description of reform efforts in three early childhood programs and discusses how programs and teachers are implementing standards-based reform. An interpretive holistic comparative case study design was used to examine three school-based early childhood programs chosen based on the extent to which they were implementing standards-based reform. Data collected included interviews with program administrators, professional development providers and coaches, teachers, and teaching assistants, and review of salient documents such as curricula and professional development materials. Study findings indicate early childhood programs are implementing standards-based reform in a variety of ways. Across all three programs, staff strove to implement SBR to the best of their abilities while dealing with various levels of funding and professional development support. Although staff in the programs expressed concerns about meeting the myriad standards associated with SBR implementation, they all found satisfaction in seeing measurable results in the performance of their students.