STUDY SUGGESTS MIXED EFFECTS OF PRE-SCHOOL DAY CARE

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - University of Arkansas researchers have found that children who spent a substantial amount of time in pre-school day care exhibited higher levels of academic readiness, more behavioral problems and lower levels of self-control in kindergarten and first grade than children who spent less time in non-parental care.

Gary Ritter, assistant professor of education policy, and Ronna Turner, assistant professor of education, leadership, counseling and foundations, presented their findings at the 2003 biennial meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development.

The researchers used statistics on approximately 17,000 students from nearly 900 kindergarten programs the Early Childhood Longitudinal Survey (ECLS-K) database. These students were then assessed again in first grade. Ritter and Turner sought to test the hypothesis put forward by Jay Belsky with the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development that children who spent more time in non-parental care early on are more likely to be more academically prepared but less well-behaved in school.

They broke down pre-school care into several different categories: parental care, center-based care, Head Start programs, in-home care by a caregiver and other care. They also broke down the hours spent in non-parental care into none, less than 10 hours, 10 to 30 hours and more than 30 hours. And they looked at the age at which children entered non-parental care.

Teachers and parents of children in the study were asked to assess aspects of the children’s behavior in the fall of kindergarten and the spring of first grade. They were asked to look at approaches to learning, self-control, interpersonal skills, externalizing problem behaviors and internalizing problem behaviors.

They found that children in care for more than 30 hours a week of formal day care and children who entered non-parental care before age one exhibited the highest tendency to externalize behaviors when compared to students who spent less time in day care. This effect held true for students in kindergarten and first grade, the researchers found.

Children who spent from one to 10 hours a week in outside care had the best test scores and the best behavior, slightly above that of children who remained in parental care full time.

The study also found that students in day care situations performed better on kindergarten reading and math tests than did their stay-at-home counterparts.

"In sum, kids in more formal day care were more prepared cognitively and more troubled behaviorally when they entered kindergarten than kids in parental care," Ritter said.

"However, the differences in academic performance at the beginning of kindergarten diminished by the end of first grade," Turner said.

The researchers point out that the study leaves many open questions to pursue, including the meaning of these statistically significant findings. Do the behavioral differences translate into children in need of lots of help or into a child who needs a few well-directed words to help point him or her in the right direction?

The study does not address this, but it does provide a starting point for doing so. The researchers are continuing to examine the database to understand these issues more fully.

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Contacts
Gary Ritter, assistant professor, education policy (479) 575-4971, garyr@uark.edu

Ronna Turner, assistant professor, education, leadership, counseling and foundations (479) 575-5593, rcturner@uark.edu

Melissa Blouin, science and research communications manager (479) 575-5555, blouin@uark.edu

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