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Sustained Benefits of a Preschool Home Visiting Program: Child Outcomes in Fifth Grade.

Authors :
Bierman KL
Heinrichs BS
Welsh JA
Nix RL
Source :
Early childhood research quarterly [Early Child Res Q] 2021 3rd Quarter; Vol. 56, pp. 260-271. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 May 06.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

This study evaluated the sustained effects of the Research-based Developmentally Informed Parent program (REDI-P) at fifth grade, six years after intervention. Participants were 200 prekindergarten children attending Head Start (55% White, 26% Black, 19% Latinx, 56% male, mean age of 4.45 years at study initiation) and their primary caregivers, who were randomly assigned to a control group or a 16-session home-visiting intervention that bridged the preschool and kindergarten years. In addition, the study explored moderation of sustained effects by parenting risks (e.g., less than high-school education, single-parent status, parental depression, and low parent-child warmth). Growth curves over the course of the elementary years examined outcomes in three domains: child academic performance, social-emotional adjustment, and parent-child functioning. At fifth grade, significant main effects for intervention were sustained in the domains of academic performance (e.g., reading skills, academic motivation, and learning engagement) and parent-child functioning (e.g., academic expectations and parenting stress). Significant moderation by parenting risk emerged on measures of social-emotional adjustment (e.g., social competence and student-teacher relationships); parenting risk also amplified effects on some measures of academic performance and parent-child functioning, with larger effects for children from families experiencing fewer risks. Implications are discussed for the design of preschool home visiting programs seeking to enhance the school success and social-emotional well-being of children living in poverty.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0885-2006
Volume :
56
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Early childhood research quarterly
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34083870
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecresq.2021.03.017