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Compared to what? Variation in the impacts of early childhood education by alternative care type
Author(s) -
Avi Feller,
Todd Grindal,
Luke Miratrix,
Lindsay C. Page
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
the annals of applied statistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.674
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1941-7330
pISSN - 1932-6157
DOI - 10.1214/16-aoas910
Subject(s) - head start , vocabulary , early childhood , psychological intervention , early childhood education , variation (astronomy) , intervention (counseling) , medicine , psychology , nursing , developmental psychology , linguistics , physics , astrophysics , philosophy
Early childhood education research often compares a group of children who receive the intervention of interest to a group of children who receive care in a range of different care settings. In this paper, we estimate differential impacts of an early childhood intervention by alternative care setting, using data from the Head Start Impact Study, a large-scale randomized evaluation. To do so, we utilize a Bayesian principal stratification framework to estimate separate impacts for two types of Compliers: those children who would otherwise be in other center-based care when assigned to control and those who would otherwise be in home-based care. We find strong, positive short-term effects of Head Start on receptive vocabulary for those Compliers who would otherwise be in home-based care. By contrast, we find no meaningful impact of Head Start on vocabulary for those Compliers who would otherwise be in other center-based care. Our findings suggest that alternative care type is a potentially important source of variation in early childhood education interventions.

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