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New Findings on Impact Variation From the Head Start Impact Study: Informing the Scale-Up of Early Childhood Programs
Author(s) -
Pamela Morris,
Maia C. Connors,
Allison H. FriedmanKrauss,
Dana Charles McCoy,
Christina Weiland,
Avi Feller,
Lindsay C. Page,
Howard Bloom,
Hirokazu Yoshikawa
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
aera open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2332-8584
DOI - 10.1177/2332858418769287
Subject(s) - head start , counterfactual thinking , early childhood education , early head start , context (archaeology) , scale (ratio) , variation (astronomy) , psychology , early childhood , developmental psychology , geography , social psychology , physics , cartography , archaeology , astrophysics
This article synthesizes findings from a reanalysis of data from the Head Start Impact Study with a focus on impact variation. This study addressed whether the size of Head Start’s impacts on children’s access to center-based and high-quality care and their school readiness skills varied by child characteristics, geographic location, and the experiences of children in the control group. Across multiple sets of analyses based on new, innovative statistical methods, findings suggest that the topline Head Start Impact Study results of Head Start’s average impacts mask substantial variation in its effectiveness and that one key source of that variation was in the counterfactual experiences and the context of Head Start sites (as well as the more typically examined child characteristics; e.g., children’s dual language learner status). Implications are discussed for the future of Head Start and further research, as well as the scale-up of other early childhood programs, policies, and practices.

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