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      Centre-based day care for children younger than five years of age in low- and middle-income countries

      1 , 2 , 3 , 4
      Cochrane Developmental, Psychosocial and Learning Problems Group
      Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
      Wiley

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          Are there long-term effects of early child care?

          Effects of early child care on children's functioning from 4(1/2) years through the end of 6th grade (M age=12.0 years) were examined in the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development (n=1,364). The results indicated that although parenting was a stronger and more consistent predictor of children's development than early child-care experience, higher quality care predicted higher vocabulary scores and more exposure to center care predicted more teacher-reported externalizing problems. Discussion focuses on mechanisms responsible for these effects, the potential collective consequences of small child-care effects, and the importance of the ongoing follow-up at age 15.
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            How does early childhood care and education affect cognitive development? An international review of the effects of early interventions for children from different social backgrounds

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              The development of cognitive and academic abilities: growth curves from an early childhood educational experiment.

              In the Abecedarian Project, a prospective randomized trial, the effects of early educational intervention on patterns of cognitive and academic development among poor, minority children were examined. Participants in the follow-up were 104 of the original 111 participants in the study (98% African American). Early treatment was full-time, high-quality, educational child care from infancy to age 5. Cognitive test scores collected between the ages of 3 and 21 years and academic test scores from 8 to 21 years were analyzed. Treated children, on average, attained higher scores on both cognitive and academic tests, with moderate to large treatment effect sizes observed through age 21. Preschool cognitive gains accounted for a substantial portion of treatment differences in the development of reading and math skills. Intensive early childhood education can have long-lasting effects on cognitive and academic development.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
                Wiley
                14651858
                September 25 2014
                Affiliations
                [1 ]University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Department of Sociology; 155 Hamilton Hall CB #3210 Chapel HIll North Carolina USA 27510
                [2 ]University of Oxford; Centre for Evidence-Based Intervention, Department of Social Policy and Intervention; 32 Wellington Square Oxford Oxfordshire UK OX1 2ER
                [3 ]University of Michigan; Department of Psychology; 503 Church Street Ann Arbor Michigan USA 48109
                [4 ]Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health; Department of Epidemiology; 615 North Wolfe Street Baltimore Maryland USA 21205
                Article
                10.1002/14651858.CD010543.pub2
                25254354
                e73a4e96-25f9-447a-ad9c-2ef3260b097e
                © 2014
                History

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