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Long-term effects of early childhood programs through eighth grade: Do the effects fade out or grow?

Publication ,  Journal Article
Bai, Y; Ladd, HF; Muschkin, CG; Dodge, KA
Published in: Children and youth services review
May 2020

Support for policies to improve early childhood educational development and reduce disparities grew rapidly this century but recently has wavered because of findings that program effects might fade out prematurely. Two programs implemented at scale in North Carolina (Smart Start and More at Four) have been associated with academic success early in elementary school, but it is not known whether these effects fade out or are sustained in middle school. Smart Start provides state funding to support high-quality early childcare in local communities, and More at Four provides state-funded slots for a year of credentialed pre-kindergarten. Funds were allocated for each program at varying rates across counties and years. We used this variation to estimate the long-term impact of each program through eighth grade, by measuring the association between state funding allocations to each program, in each of 100 counties over each of 13 consecutive years, and later student performance. Students were matched to funding levels provided to their home county in their early childhood years and then followed through eighth grade. Analyses using county- and year-fixed-effects regression models with individualand school-level covariates conducted on nearly 900,000 middle school students indicate significant positive impacts of funding for each program on reading and math test scores and reductions in special education placement and grade retention. These impacts do not fade out and seem instead to grow (for More at Four) as students progress through middle school. Students from economically disadvantaged backgrounds experience particularly large benefits from the More at Four Program.

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Published In

Children and youth services review

DOI

EISSN

1873-7765

ISSN

0190-7409

Publication Date

May 2020

Volume

112

Start / End Page

104890

Related Subject Headings

  • Social Work
  • 4410 Sociology
  • 4409 Social work
  • 1607 Social Work
  • 1402 Applied Economics
 

Citation

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Bai, Y., Ladd, H. F., Muschkin, C. G., & Dodge, K. A. (2020). Long-term effects of early childhood programs through eighth grade: Do the effects fade out or grow? Children and Youth Services Review, 112, 104890. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.104890
Bai, Yu, Helen F. Ladd, Clara G. Muschkin, and Kenneth A. Dodge. “Long-term effects of early childhood programs through eighth grade: Do the effects fade out or grow?Children and Youth Services Review 112 (May 2020): 104890. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.104890.
Bai Y, Ladd HF, Muschkin CG, Dodge KA. Long-term effects of early childhood programs through eighth grade: Do the effects fade out or grow? Children and youth services review. 2020 May;112:104890.
Bai, Yu, et al. “Long-term effects of early childhood programs through eighth grade: Do the effects fade out or grow?Children and Youth Services Review, vol. 112, May 2020, p. 104890. Epmc, doi:10.1016/j.childyouth.2020.104890.
Bai Y, Ladd HF, Muschkin CG, Dodge KA. Long-term effects of early childhood programs through eighth grade: Do the effects fade out or grow? Children and youth services review. 2020 May;112:104890.
Journal cover image

Published In

Children and youth services review

DOI

EISSN

1873-7765

ISSN

0190-7409

Publication Date

May 2020

Volume

112

Start / End Page

104890

Related Subject Headings

  • Social Work
  • 4410 Sociology
  • 4409 Social work
  • 1607 Social Work
  • 1402 Applied Economics