Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Making the Grade: Why Early Education Matters

Making the Grade: Why early education matters
Findings and implications of the Alliance for Children longitudinal study

Bruce Yelton, BYC Consulting


Abstract

The Alliance for Children located in Union County, North Carolina conducted an eight year longitudinal study to investigate the effects of early childhood education (ECE) experiences on children’s school performance.  Several variables were considered in this study including program participation, program quality, instructional quality, kindergarten transition and student ethnicity.  The results of the study show continued positive impacts for student’s academic performance as a result of program participation including at or above on-grade-level performance in reading through the fourth grade.  This effect of participation is larger for Hispanic and African-American children than for white students but all students benefitted from participation in ECE.  The data also indicate positive effects of higher levels of ECE teacher education, positive kindergarten transitions and higher levels of parent participation in school transitions on grade level achievement in reading.

These outcomes support previous research findings that indicate ECE participation, especially ECE of high quality, provides long-term cost effective benefits.  It also encourages the Alliance to continue to seek innovative ways to provide high quality services that reach across all communities to address the interests and needs of families, children, schools, communities and business.


Just wanting to know

Beginning in 2006 and continuing through 2014, one small organization undertook a very large task.  The leadership of the Alliance for Children in Union County, North Carolina, wanted to know if their work was making a difference.  Since most of their work consists of supporting and enhancing early childhood care and education they wanted to know if that care and education made a difference in the way children who participated in it performed once they reached public school.  Did they learn to read?  Did they get promoted to the next grade?  Did they get along with their fellow students?  Through a happy combination of agreeable circumstances (funding, available research expertise, cooperative public school officials) they supported a longitudinal study of children from a variety of backgrounds and experiences prior to entering school.  From 2006 through 2012 five different cohorts of kindergarten students have been examined to trace the relationship between their early educational experiences and their school performance.  These students were identified through the participation of their families as they enrolled in the Union County Public Schools and represent a broad demographic sample of the county’s population including both affluent and economically challenged populations.  Information about student early education and experiences were collected directly from families by questionnaire and information about school performance was provided by through public school records.  Over seven years, a sample of 1,944 students was included in the study.

Some of the information that was included in the study deserves particular attention to better understand the findings.
·         The study was very concerned about “making a difference” and the Alliance’s primary means of making a difference is through the support of early childhood education (ECE).  The study was especially interested in ECE at the age of four, just prior to kindergarten entry, due to the existence of local programs specifically targeting this age group for support.  Students in this study were characterized both by attending or not attending ECE and for those who did attend by the type of program attended (ex. NC PreK, Title 1, Head Start, Public, GS110). 
·         The study also examined the “quality” of care provided by ECE programs.  Quality measures investigated in relationship to school achievement included the number of interactions with the Alliance, NC Division of Child Development center awarded “stars”, and the qualifications of the teaching staff.
·         School academic achievement can be measured in many ways and the study looked at many school outcome measures including promotion, attendance, NC K-2 Assessment, teacher ratings, standardized test scores and others.  Many of these variables showed significant positive relationships to ECE experiences.  However, the most consistent and easily understood academic measure in the data provided by the schools was that provided by the NC End-of-Grade Testing in Reading and Mathematics for Grades 3-8.   These tests provide an assessment of a student’s grade level status.  Students can be rated as “significantly below” or “below” grade level or “at” or “significantly above” grade level.
·         Previous research in early childhood education has suggested that support for children and families during the transition from ECE to Kindergarten can make a significant difference in carrying over the benefits of ECE into school.  The study asked parents about their transition experiences and how well their children adjusted to public school kindergarten socially, academically, and behaviorally.
·         Research findings in similar settings also suggested that some children may benefit more from ECE programs than others.  For this reason the study collected demographic information about the students and their families.  This included ethnicity, English proficiency, gender, family income, and other related information.

Where it fits
This is not the first time a study like this has been done in North Carolina.  Indeed, one of the most important long term studies of early education, the Abecedarian Project, was conducted in North Carolina.  This study however was different from the Union study in many ways including a focus on a particular approach to intensive quality early education.  Other, more similar studies have been conducted by the NC Partnership for Children and by local partnerships including Region A, Mecklenburg and Randolph counties looking at participation in early education primarily at age four.

The findings from the Alliance study align with the findings of Steven Barnett of Rutgers University and the National Institute for Early Education Research 2008 meta-analysis of the lasting effects of preschool education.  In this work he finds that early education does make a difference in children’s learning and, as we might expect, the size and persistence of that difference is effected by the type of program the child attends.  High quality programs produce long-term differences in school success.  There is also evidence that the children of the poor may benefit differentially from attending preschool but all children benefit regardless of economic condition.

 What we learned

The Alliance study found persistent advantages for children who attended four-year-old programs in on-grade-level performance from kindergarten through 5th grade.  Kindergarten through second grade students who attended four-year-old programs consistently performed better on kindergarten screening measures and measures of reading and mathematics skills at the end of kindergarten.  In 3rd grade 61% of all students in the study who had attended four-year-old programs were performing “at or above” grade level in reading compared to 54% of those who had not.  When sub-groups are analyzed the findings are striking.  In Title 1 schools the difference in on-grade level status between those who attended and those who did not attend four-year old programs is 1.5% for white students, 7% for African-American students, and 12% for Hispanic students.  These differences are consistent across cohorts, include mathematics performance, and remain through at least the 5th grade.  Over time the effect size does become smaller but it persists.  At 5th grade there remains a 6% advantage in on-grade-level performance for Hispanic children who attended preschool at age four compared to their peers who did not.  As we might predict from Barnett’s work, in a broad sample of early education programs of varying quality, the benefits of early education persist at varying rates but show the greatest benefits for minority/poor children.  Another phenomenon may also be at work here as explored by a longitudinal study completed on children who had participated in the state sponsored Arkansas preK program.  This study also observed diminished effects of the intervention by the end of 3rd grade and posited:
One explanation for estimated effects falling off at the end of third grade is provided
by another important finding from this study: children who attended ABC were less likely to be retained in grade. This is a key indication that schools are expending extra effort to help those most behind catch up, which disproportionately helps children who did not attend the ABC program. While effective, these efforts are expensive, and may include extra teacher time in the classroom, remedial programs, and even special education. These efforts may gradually reduce the test score advantages for ABC children in later years, but at a substantial cost (p. 4, Jung, Barnett, Hustedt, & Francis, 2013).

The results of the Alliance study also demonstrated significant “on-grade-level” advantages for children whose families were actively involved in ECE to kindergarten transition and where that transition, particularly in literacy skill development, was a described as a “smooth” one from the child’s previous educational setting.  In addition, a third factor was found to be statistically significantly related to 3rd and 4th grade performance: preK teacher educational level. 

Economics, politics and children

Since the beginning of the longitudinal study in 2006, several events that are relevant to the study have occurred.  On the national scale there was the now named “great recession” of 2008-09 resulting in a large increase in unemployment in the country as a whole as well as in the state and Union County.  This development was reflected in a drop in our data for enrollment of four-year-olds in all county ECE programs by over 10% from 2006-07 (73.3%) to 2007-08 (62.1%) with enrollment rates not reaching 2006 levels again until 2010-11.  The economic downturn has been accompanied by changes in the political structure of the state government and related spending for state sponsored preK education.  In 2006 state spending per four-year participant was $4,840.  This figure rose to $5,797 per student in 2009 but in 2013 was back at 2006 levels at $4,960 per student (all figures in 2013 equivalent dollars) (NIEER, 2014).  On the positive side, both North Carolina as a state and Union County have established high standards for early care.  The state met 10 of 10 quality benchmarks established by NIEER for preK quality in 2013.  The state ranked 20th in access to public preK across the nation in 2009 and again in 2013.  This is after ranking as low as 19th in 2010-2011 and rising to 23rd in 2012.  In Union County progress in developing quality care in child care centers has been more consistent with average county-wide center “star ratings” rising from 3.29 in 2006 to 4.16 in 2012 (5 stars are the maximum rating).  There is evidence in the county data to show that the improvement in the quality of available of programs for four-year olds may have impacted the overall performance of children as they both arrived at kindergarten and through their three years of school (Yelton, Stranges & Richardson, 2013).  Data for students in the study from kindergarten through grade 2 show cohort to cohort increases in average scores on both screening assessments and end-of-grade skills assessments.  In other words, as the available quality of preK goes up the academic performance of those who participate in those programs rises proportionately.  These improvements were not observed for children who did not participate in preK. 
The Alliance Longitudinal Study benefitted greatly from the collaboration of the Union County Public Schools throughout its implementation.  During the eight years of the study the schools themselves have been under tremendous governmental and public pressure to address issues of rapid growth, equity, accountability and changes in federal and state educational policy.  To see how such pressures drive and impact early education it is only required to look at one example, the current drive towards implementation of the “common core curriculum”.  The “common core” sets national standards in English and mathematics and the hope is that adherence to these standards will make American students better prepared for the workplace and college after graduation.  This is a “hope” because as critics as diverse as Diane Ravitch, formerly of the G. W. Bush administration, and Tom Loveless of the Brookings institute have stated that there is no evidence to support the fact that they will (McSpadden, 2014, Resmovits, 2013) .  What we have been assured of is that the common core has driven increased assessment; focus on “core” subjects and diversion of public, corporate, and foundation funding from areas sorely in need of help like child nutrition, literacy programs, reading coaches, dental clinics and early education.  Other examples could be cited regarding policy impacts on early education including changes in teacher accountability, STEM content, school re-segregation, and others. 

Where from here

In the spring of 2013 five mothers of children who were in the final cohort of the longitudinal study were asked to be part of a focus group to discuss kindergarten transition and to share their impressions of the impact of ECE on school achievement.  At the time their children were midway through the 1st grade. The mothers in the group included both non-English speaking recent arrivals to Union County and more affluent long term residents.  The moms conversed for more than an hour about their children’s’ experiences in ECE, kindergarten and first grade.  They also talked about their own experiences in interacting with teachers, administrators, and other education professionals.  Several things became clear from the mothers comments.  All the participants have gotten early educators’ message that they have a role to play in the literacy development of their children (i.e., having books in the home, talking and reading to their children) and they strongly believe that ECE made a significant difference in their child’s preparation and success in school. In addition, they recognize the academic and social benefits provided to their children by their experiences in ECE prior to starting school.  Some of their comments included:
“I mean, it’s amazing what they have to know as soon as they start kindergarten, and there are some in the class that you can tell that they just never really got that chance, and they’re a little behind, and it’s not really fair for them, you know?  It’s kind of sad. “

          “That if possible, they really need to (attend ECE), and I know it’s hard,  I know every family                and every situation is different, but if there’s a way their child can fit into a preschool or some            kind of learning center or something, that it’s really good for them.  I mean, it is good for the             child all the way around.  They learn to interact with other kids, and they learn a whole lot, and            nowadays it seems like every year they step it up a reading level.”
What is also clear from these comments is that the parents were strongly aware of the academic demands placed on their children beginning with their enrollment in public school. 
Quality early education makes a long-term difference in academic achievement.  We have seen it here, we see it across the country, and we see it across the world.  We see it for disadvantaged children and we see it for middle-class children.  We know that early education is cost effective, dollars invested are paid back and more in savings through increased high school graduation, increased earnings, decreased crime and delinquency, and better mental health (Barnett & Frede, 2010).  High quality preK programs have demonstrated benefits ratios of from 2.5 to 16 times the investments costs (Barnett, 2013). 

So, what? 

The story runs something like this.  Two people are walking along a swiftly flowing river.  They look out into the current and they see a child drowning.  They immediately jump into the water and after a mighty struggle manage to pull the child to safety.  As soon as they pull the child from the water they see another child just upstream going under.  Again with great effort they jump in and barely succeed in saving the child.  Then there is another child and another.  After pulling many children from the river one rescuer begins to walk away. “Where are you going?  There are children drowning here,” her friend shouts!
“I’m going upstream to stop these children from falling in the water,” she replies (Alvarez, Berlin, Glasgow, McMahon, & Nerheim (2014). 
Stopping the children from falling in the water is clearly not an easy task.  Well intentioned efforts and many dollars have been directed at ending academic failure and other ills for quite some time with only incomplete or temporary victories.  Universal quality early care as recommended by Dr. Barnett would indubitably help reduce rates of school failure, delinquency, unemployment and so forth.  However, it is undoubted that even the full application of all his recommendation would result in successful school outcomes for all children.  It is perhaps still only a better way to save more children from the river rather than going “upstream”.

The “river” that creates children who fail in school and in life is poverty.  Any approach to solving a manifestation of poverty, like school failure, that does not recognize this fact and the complexity of addressing it is doomed to only partial success or complete failure. 

The lead researcher of this paper in one of his first jobs was assigned the task of finding employment for inner city teenagers.  From the rural South and largely ignorant of city conditions he interviewed kids, matched them up with jobs on index cards and sent them out on interviews.  The kids were enthusiastic about the jobs and the opportunity to make a few dollars during the summer.   However many of the kids weren’t showing up for interviews and even some that were hired weren’t showing up for work.  When asked about this they sometimes had flimsy reasons why they didn’t show and other times none at all beyond a shrug.  A colleague from the city finally clued him in “You can’t send kids from one neighborhood into another when they have to cross gang territories.  They can die.”  His Southern, middle class, college learning was simply inadequate for the task of finding these kids work.  Crime, unemployment, lack of primary health care, family dysfunction, drug abuse, inaccessibility of economic/political resources are all factors in preventing many programs designed by well-intentioned individuals from working as well as they should and in taking advantage of the huge reservoirs of energy, creativity, intelligence and endurance that exist in communities where persons with few assets reside.

This reality being accepted is not an excuse for giving up.  Indeed, it is a rallying cry for ingenuity.  Programs and policy makers who believe that any single solution is a panacea are foolish; those who blame any single solution for failing are not examining all of the data.  Complex problems call for complex responses and the understanding that they will not be “fixed” in a 2-, 3- or even 10-year grant cycle.

Some programs do address the complexities of poverty in their operations and do seem to have a lasting impact on children and their families.  These approaches are different in that they not only are inclusive but they are also holistic and long-term.  Three of the more promising of these are the Nurse Family Partnership, The Abecedarian Project and the Harlem Children’s Zone’s Promise Neighborhoods.

The nurse family partnership maternal health program provides first-time parents maternal and child health nurses.  The nurses support first time mothers through a healthy pregnancy and help them become knowledgeable parents.  The mothers and the nurses establish an ongoing relationship that persists for the child’s first three years.  The long-term outcomes from this program show that the mother’s benefit from improved prenatal health, fewer subsequent pregnancies, increased intervals between births, and increased employment.  The child participants demonstrate increased school readiness and a decreased likelihood of adult incarceration (Nurse Family Partnership, 2014; Eckenrode, Campa, Luckey, Henderson, Cole, Kitzman, Anson, Sidora-Arcoleo, Powers, & Olds, 2010.
The Harlem Children’s Zone mission is to help kids as early in their lives as possible and to provide them with caring adults who understand their needs and can help them succeed.  The Zone’s original area of concentration focused on providing holistic services to a 100 block area of Harlem with a history of poverty, violence, and low academic achievement.  Out of the success of this project came the Promise Neighborhoods program, a project that is sponsored by  the U.S. Department of Education which provides federal funding help communities create integrated health, social, education and other community development services. While not enough time has passed judge the Harlem Children’s Zone achievement of its goal of ending intergenerational poverty, there are data that indicate that the effort is having an impact on student’s reading and mathematics achievement (Harlem Children’s Zone, 2014).
The Abecedarian project was carried in North Carolina with four groups of children born between 1972 and 1977.  The study provided full-time, high-quality ECE from birth through age five.  This well-designed research study found that there were significant benefits that could be directly associated too participation in the Abecedarian ECE program.  For children in the program these included:
  • Higher cognitive test scores from the toddler years to age 21.
  • Higher achievement in both reading and math from the primary grades through young adulthood.
  • More years of education and a greater likelihood of attending a four-year college.
  • Delay in having their first child.
 Early education programs that can use the existing knowledge about what works in the long-term for young children’s academic achievement, apply the lessons learned from the efforts listed above; adapted to their own circumstances will be on their way to making a difference for the children of their communities. 

With the local knowledge developed by the Alliance for Children in Union County, clear national data supporting those findings and new ideas lighting the way the future may be bright for children in our care if we can be as creative as they already are.





References
Alvarez, Berlin, Glasgow, McMahon, Nerheim (2014). Early intervention helps at-risk Illinois kids succeed later in life. Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 6/27/14 from http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2014-05-01/opinion/ct-perspec-childhood-0501-20140501_1_more-children-early-intervention-child-development-and-parenting.

Barnett, W. S. (2008). Preschool education and its lasting effects: Research and policy
implications. Boulder and Tempe: Education and the Public Interest Center & Education
Policy Research Unit. Retrieved 5/27/14 from http://epicpolicy.org/publication/preschooleducation.

Barnett, W. S. & Frede, E. (2010). The Promise of Preschool: Why we need early education for all.  American Educator Spring (21-40).

Barnett, W. S. (2013). Should the United States have preK for all.  Presentation at Duke University.  October 22, 2013. 

Eckenrode, J., Campa, M., Luckey, D., Henderson, C., Cole, R., Kitzman, H., Anson, E., Sidora-Arcoleo, K., Powers, J., & Olds, D. (2010). Long-term Effects of Prenatal and Infancy Nurse Home Visitation on the Life Course of Youths. Retrieved 627/14 from http://archpedi.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=382597.

Harlem Children’s Zone (2014). Spreading the model: The practitioners institute. Retrieved 6/27/14 from http://hcz.org/spreading-the-model/

Jung, K., Barnett, W.S., Hustedt, J., & Francis, J. (2013). Longitudinal Effects of the Arkansas Better Chance Program: Findings from First Grade through Fourth Grade. Retrieved 6/27/14 from http://nieer.org/sites/nieer/files/Arkansas%20Longitudinal%20Report%20May2013n.pdf.

McSpadden, K. (May 10, 2014) Common Core’s problems.  Charlotte Observer.
National Institute for Early Education Research (2014). NIEER 2013 State Preschool Year.  Retrieved 6/27/14 from http://nieer.org/publications/state-preschool-2013.

Nurse Family Partnership (2014). Proven effective through extensive research. Retrieved 6/27/14 from http://www.nursefamilypartnership.org/proven-results.

Resmovits, J. (August 30, 2013) David Coleman, Common Core writer, gears up for SAT rewrite. Retrieved 6/27/14 from http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/30/david-coleman-common-core-sat_n_3818107.html.

Yelton, B., Stranges, D. & Richardson, M. (May, 2013) And the children in the apple tree:  Further poetic findings from the Union County Longitudinal Study 2007-2013.  Paper presented at the Annual Smart Start Conference, Greensboro, NC.