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Current Filters: Pub Year:2012 [remove]; Classification:Preschool [remove];

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The effects of pre-school attendance on the cognitive development of urban children aged 5 and 8 years: Evidence from Ethiopia
Woldehanna, Tassew, December, 2012
(Working Paper 89). Oxford, United Kingdom: Young Lives.

This paper, using data from the Young Lives longitudinal survey in Ethiopia, examines the effects of pre-school attendance on the cognitive development of urban children at the ages of 5 and 8 (measured by the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT) and the Cognitive Development Assessment - Quantitative test (CDA-Q)). We used propensity score matching techniques in order to estimate the impact of pre-school. We also substantiated the analysis using various empirical approaches including ordinary least squares and instrumental variable estimation methods. Our results show that pre-school attendance has a statistically significant positive impact on the cognitive development of children at the ages of both 5 and 8 years, with the bigger impact at the latter age. Moreover, pre-school attendance has also a positive and statistically significant effect on primary school enrolment and progression through grades. Despite the fact that early childhood education has immense importance for children's cognitive development, public investment in pre-school education is currently limited in Ethiopia, with the private sector taking the key role, which may exacerbate the inequality that exists between rich and poor (and between urban and rural areas). Therefore, given the relatively low rate of pre-school attendance and the low quality of basic education, the Government needs to reconsider its education priorities so as to invest more in early childhood education. (author abstract)

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Identifying and addressing challenges to research in university laboratory preschools
File, Nancy, March, 2012
Early Education and Development, 23(2), 143-152

An overview of challenges that university laboratory preschools face in providing a site for research that fits with other components of the program mission, suggestions for addressing reluctance from teachers and children for research participation, and recommendations for ensuring that the setting provides a realistic and authentic model for generating useful research

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The Inclusive Classroom Profile (ICP): Preliminary findings of demonstration study in North Carolina
Soukakou, Eleni P., 2012
Chapel Hill, NC: National Professional Development Center on Inclusion.

Findings from an exploration of the reliability, validity, and usability of the Inclusive Classroom Profile (ICP), a measure of the quality of practices to support the development of children with disabilities in early childhood settings, based on a field test conducted in 51 inclusive preschool classrooms in North Carolina

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Introduction to the special issue on university laboratory preschools in the 21st century
Elicker, James, March, 2012
Early Education and Development, 23(2), 139-142

An introduction to a special issue of the journal Early Education and Development, focusing on the changing roles of the laboratory preschools in institutes of higher education

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Is preschool good for kids?
World Bank. Human Development Network. Office of the Chief Economist, March, 2012
Washington, DC: World Bank, Human Development Network.

A summary of a study of the effect of a community-based preschool program in Mozambique on primary school enrollment, child development and health, school enrollment of older siblings, and adult caregivers, based on baseline and two-year follow-up data collected from children, households, community leaders, and schools in 76 randomly assigned communities, 30 of which implemented the preschool program

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Preschools reduce early academic-achievement gaps: A longitudinal twin approach
Tucker-Drob, Elliot Max, March, 2012
Psychological Science, 23(3), 310-319

A longitudinal study of the influences of preschool attendance, early mental ability, race, socioeconomic status, parental interactions, genetics, and shared environments on early reading and math scores in a sample of 600 twin pairs

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The promise of preschool in Africa: A randomized impact evaluation of early childhood development in rural Mozambique
Martinez, Sebastian Wilde, 06 February, 2012
Washington, DC: World Bank.

A study of the effect of a community-based preschool program in Mozambique on primary school enrollment, child development and health, school enrollment of older siblings, and adult caregivers, based on baseline and two-year follow-up data collected from children, households, community leaders, and schools in 76 randomly assigned communities, 30 of which implemented the preschool program

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University laboratory preschools in the 21st century [Special issue]
Elicker, James, March, 2012
Early Education and Development, 23(2)

A special issue of the journal Early Education and Development focusing on the changing roles of the laboratory preschools in institutes of higher education

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Research Connections is supported by grant #90YE0104 from the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The contents are solely the responsibility of the National Center for Children in Poverty and the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, the Administration for Children and Families, or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

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