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Quality child care supports the achievement of low-income children: Direct and indirect pathways through caregiving and the home environment
Authors:Kathleen McCartney   Eric Dearing   Beck A. Taylor  Kristen L. Bub
Affiliation:aHarvard University Graduate School of Education, United States;bDepartment of Counseling, Developmental, and Educational Psychology, Lynch School of Education, Boston College, United States;cSchool of Business, Samford University, United States
Abstract:Existing studies of child care have not been able to determine whether higher quality child care protects children from the effects of poverty, whether poverty and lower quality child care operate as dual risk factors, or whether both are true. The objective of the current study was to test two pathways through which child care may serve as a naturally occurring intervention for low-income children: a direct pathway through child care quality to child outcomes, and an indirect pathway through improvements in the home environment. Children were observed in their homes and child care settings at 6, 15, 24, and 36 months. An interaction between family income-to-needs ratio and child care quality predicted School Readiness, Receptive Language, and Expressive Language, as well as improvements in the home environment. Children from low-income families profited from observed learning supports in the form of sensitive care and stimulation of cognitive development, and their parents profited from unobserved informal and formal parent supports. Policy implications are discussed.
Keywords:Child care   Poverty   Achievement   Home environment
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