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Findings and Implications for Programs From the Early Head Start Research and Evaluation Project

Findings and Implications for Programs From the Early Head Start Research and Evaluation Project. October 2005. Understanding Early Head Start.

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Findings and Implications for Programs From the Early Head Start Research and Evaluation Project

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  1. Findings and Implications for Programs From the Early Head Start Research and Evaluation Project October 2005

  2. Understanding Early Head Start • Comprehensive, two-generational program designed to promote healthy prenatal outcomes for pregnant women, enhance the development of very young children, and promote healthy family functioning.

  3. The Early Head Start Program • Established in 1994 • Over 700 programs serving about 62,000 children • Various beginnings, but all become Head Start • Currently 10% of the Head Start budget • Follows the Head Start Program Performance Standards

  4. Program Options for Service Delivery • Home Based • Center Based • Combination of Home and Center Based • Locally Designed options

  5. The Early Head Start Research and Evaluation Project • Began in 1995 • 3001 children and families followed from enrollment in program to child age 3, pre-kindergarten • Experimental Design Impact Study Early Head Start Control Group

  6. Early Head Start Research Sites

  7. Research Conducted by Early Head Start Research Consortium The Consortium consists of representatives from 17 programs participating in the evaluation, 15 local research teams, the evaluation contractors, and ACF/ACYF. Research institutions in the Consortium (and principal researchers) include ACF (Rachel Chazan Cohen, Judith Jerald, Esther Kresh, Helen Raikes, and Louisa Tarullo); Catholic University of America (Michaela Farber, Lynn Milgram Mayer, Harriet Liebow, Christine Sabatino, Nancy Taylor, Elizabeth Timberlake, and Shavaun Wall); Columbia University (Lisa Berlin, Christy Brady-Smith, Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, and Alison Sidle Fuligni); Harvard University (Catherine Ayoub, Barbara Alexander Pan, and Catherine Snow); Iowa State University (Dee Draper, Gayle Luze, Susan McBride, Carla Peterson); Mathematica Policy Research (Kimberly Boller, Ellen Eliason Kisker, John M. Love, Diane Paulsell, Christine Ross, Peter Schochet, Cheri Vogel, and Welmoet van Kammen); Medical University of South Carolina (Richard Faldowski, Gui-Young Hong, and Susan Pickrel); Michigan State University (Hiram Fitzgerald, Tom Reischl, and Rachel Schiffman); New York University (Mark Spellmann and Catherine Tamis-LeMonda); University of Arkansas (Robert Bradley, Mark Swanson, and Leanne Whiteside-Mansell); University of California, Los Angeles (Carollee Howes and Claire Hamilton); University of Colorado Health Sciences Center (Robert Emde, Jon Korfmacher, JoAnn Robinson, Paul Spicer, and Norman Watt); University of Kansas (Jane Atwater, Judith Carta, and Jean Ann Summers); University of Missouri-Columbia (Mark Fine, Jean Ispa, and Kathy Thornburg); University of Pittsburgh (Carol McAllister, Beth Green, and Robert McCall); University of Washington School of Education (Eduardo Armijo and Joseph Stowitschek); University of Washington School of Nursing (Kathryn Barnard and Susan Spieker); and Utah State University (Lisa Boyce and Lori Roggman).

  8. Many Measures Used in the Project • Implementation data, including ratings • Family service use data 7, 16, and 28 months after enrollment (both program and control) and after leaving EHS • Child and family data collected when children were 14, 24, and 36 months old and at Pre-K • Videotaped observations of parent-child interaction • Interviewer observations (e.g., HOME scale) • Parent interview (e.g., health, mental health, parenting, child development) • Child assessments (e.g., cognitive, language)

  9. Positive Impacts: Multiple Dimensions of Children’s Development • More received immunizations • Fewer emergency room visits for accidents and injuries • Higher mean Bayley MDI Higher mean Bayley MDI (higher mean scores & fewer in low functioning group) • Larger receptive vocabularies • Lower levels of aggressive behavior • Higher sustained attention with objects • Greater engagement of parent • Less negativity toward parent

  10. Positive Impacts in Many Areas of Parenting • Greater warmth and supportiveness • Less detachment • More parent-child play • More stimulating home environments/support for learning • More daily reading • Less spanking by both mothers and fathers • More hours in education and job training • More employment hours

  11. The Program Had Positive Effects on Aspects of Parent Self-Sufficiency • More hours in education and job training • Probability of being employed (trend) • No impacts on welfare receipt or income

  12. Consistent Impacts on Participation in Education & Training Programs Percentage in Education or Training in Quarter After Random Assignment *Difference is Significant at the 5% Level

  13. No Consistent Impacts on Employment Percentage Employed in Quarter After Random Assignment *Difference is Significant at the 5% Level

  14. Less spanking Less intrusive in interaction with child Children of program fathers were more engaged and attentive. The Program Had Beneficial Impacts for Early Head Start Fathers

  15. Early Head Start Serves Many Different Types of Families

  16. Family Subgroups • Positive Impacts in 28/29 subgroups • Larger impacts in some subgroups (ES=.20-.50): (1) African American, (2) enrolled at pregnancy, (3) medium demographic risk • No impact in one group: Highest level of cumulative demographic risk

  17. Program Models Fit Community Needs Mixed approach Home-based Center-based Community Needs Assessment

  18. All Program Approaches Had Favorable Impacts Center-based programs • Enhanced children’s cognitive and social-emotional development • Improved some parenting outcomes Home-based programs • Enhanced children’s social-emotional development • Reduced parenting stress and increased self-sufficiency Mixed-approach programs • Enhanced children’s language and social-emotional development • Improved wide range of parenting behaviors and increased self-sufficiency

  19. Implementing Head Start Performance Standards Strengthened Impacts • Early implementers had strongest pattern of impacts when children were 2 • Well implemented programs (whether early or later) affected more types of outcomes when children were 3, including: • Child outcomes • Parent-child interactions • Parenting • Mental health • Progress toward economic self-sufficiency

  20. Strongest Impacts Found in Early-Implemented Mixed Programs Child development • Smaller % with low language scores • Higher cognitive scores • Greater engagement of parent • Greater sustained attention with objects Parenting and self-sufficiency • More supportive presence during the puzzle task • Higher % read daily to child • Smaller % suggest physical punishment • Higher % ever in education and ever worked • Smaller % with repeat pregnancy

  21. Impacts In Early-Implemented Mixed Programs Larger Than Overall Impacts 50 40 30 20 10 0 Bayley Engagement Daily Reading Ever Employed Early-Mixed Total Sample

  22. Conclusions • Early Head Start was broadly effective across a wide array of outcomes and family subgroups. • In several subgroups, impacts were larger as well as broad, demonstrating potential focus areas for programs in the future. • The evaluation points to ways programs can build on a good beginning.

  23. Pre-Kindergarten Follow Up

  24. Context • Advisory Committee on Services to Families with Infants and Toddlers recommended that EHS programs formalize “transitioning” to formal care and education settings for ages 3-5 • Head Start • Other Formal Care and Education

  25. Questions for Pre-Kindergarten Analyses • How does Early Head Start from birth to age 3 contribute to school readiness and family functioning? • How do child development services from birth to age 5, including formal education and care program experiences between ages 3 and 5, contribute to school readiness and family functioning at the time of school entry? • Are patterns of impacts for subgroups of families and program approaches maintained over time?

  26. Next Steps • Fifth Grade Follow-Up with reduced sample, core measures • Need to augment Fifth Grade Follow-Up sample and measures

  27. For More Information http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/opre/

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