The Impact of Expanding Access to Early Childhood Services in Rural Indonesia : Evidence from Two Cohorts of Children

This paper uses three waves of longitudinal data to examine the impact of expanding access to preschool services in rural areas of Indonesia on two cohorts of children. One cohort was children aged 4 at the start of the project and was immediately...

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Main Authors: Brinkman, Sally Anne, Hasan, Amer, Jung, Haeil, Kinnell, Angela, Pradhan, Menno
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015
Subjects:
AGE
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/07/24808116/impact-expanding-access-early-childhood-services-rural-indonesia-evidence-two-cohorts-children
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22456
id okr-10986-22456
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic SKILLS
COMMUNITIES
CAREGIVERS
RISKS
VILLAGES
SCHOOL READINESS
PEOPLE
TEACHERS
SCHOOLING
PSYCHOLOGY
EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT
ENROLLMENT
ACTIVITIES
BIAS
GROUPS
PEDIATRICS
SERVICES
COGNITIVE ACHIEVEMENT
EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE
HEALTH
ACCESS TO PRESCHOOL
PROJECTS
PROJECT
NEIGHBORHOODS
CARE CENTERS
LANGUAGE
PUBLIC HEALTH
DAY CARE
WORK EXPERIENCE
KNOWLEDGE
COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
EARLY CHILDHOOD INTERVENTIONS
CHILDHOOD EDUCATION
TRAINING
TEACHER TRAINING
PARTNERSHIPS
PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
INTERVENTION
ABILITY
PUBLIC SAFETY
CHILD DEVELOPMENT
PRESCHOOL ENROLLMENT
INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS
NEEDS
PRESCHOOLERS
LEARNING
PRIMARY SCHOOL
REASONING
TEACHING
COGNITIVE OUTCOMES
GROSS ENROLLMENT
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
INTERVIEW
MENTAL HEALTH
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
KINDERGARTEN
ENROLMENT RATES
DESIGN
PRIMARY SCHOOLS
READING
GROSS ENROLLMENT RATES
EARLY CHILD DEVELOPMENT
KINDERGARTENS
STUDY
RURAL COMMUNITIES
ENROLLMENT RATES
WAGES
SCIENCE
AGED
VALUES
SCHOOLS
DESCRIPTION
PARTICIPATION
AGE
GENDER
EDUCATION SERVICES
CLASSROOM SETTING
CHILDHOOD
COMPETENCE
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HYPERACTIVITY
PARENTING
ENROLLMENT RATE
HOUSEHOLD
FAMILY PLANNING
EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION
EFFORT
SOCIAL SCIENCE
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EDUCATIONAL SERVICES
MEASUREMENT
NUTRITION
PRIMARY CAREGIVERS
EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES
RISK FACTORS
RETURN TO EDUCATION
WEIGHT
CHILDHOOD CARE
COGNITIVE SKILLS
OBESITY
UNDERSTANDING
PRIMARY SCHOOL PARTICIPATION
CHILDREN
EDUCATION
VILLAGE LEVEL
EARLY INTERVENTION
EARLY INTERVENTIONS
INVESTMENT
HOUSEHOLDS
EQUALITY
RURAL AREAS
COMMUNITY SERVICES
EXPERIENCE
INFANTS
PRIMARY SCHOOL EDUCATION
CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT
INTERACTIONS
COMMUNICATION
INTERVENTIONS
NET ENROLLMENT
COMMUNITY
STRATEGY
SOCIAL PROBLEMS
EPIDEMIOLOGY
FEES
FAMILIES
WOMEN
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
CLASSROOM
SAFETY
HEALTH SERVICES
IMPLEMENTATION
SERVICE
DISTRICTS
PARTICIPATION RATES
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
RETURNS TO EDUCATION
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
spellingShingle SKILLS
COMMUNITIES
CAREGIVERS
RISKS
VILLAGES
SCHOOL READINESS
PEOPLE
TEACHERS
SCHOOLING
PSYCHOLOGY
EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT
ENROLLMENT
ACTIVITIES
BIAS
GROUPS
PEDIATRICS
SERVICES
COGNITIVE ACHIEVEMENT
EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE
HEALTH
ACCESS TO PRESCHOOL
PROJECTS
PROJECT
NEIGHBORHOODS
CARE CENTERS
LANGUAGE
PUBLIC HEALTH
DAY CARE
WORK EXPERIENCE
KNOWLEDGE
COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT
EARLY CHILDHOOD INTERVENTIONS
CHILDHOOD EDUCATION
TRAINING
TEACHER TRAINING
PARTNERSHIPS
PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
INTERVENTION
ABILITY
PUBLIC SAFETY
CHILD DEVELOPMENT
PRESCHOOL ENROLLMENT
INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS
NEEDS
PRESCHOOLERS
LEARNING
PRIMARY SCHOOL
REASONING
TEACHING
COGNITIVE OUTCOMES
GROSS ENROLLMENT
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
INTERVIEW
MENTAL HEALTH
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY
KINDERGARTEN
ENROLMENT RATES
DESIGN
PRIMARY SCHOOLS
READING
GROSS ENROLLMENT RATES
EARLY CHILD DEVELOPMENT
KINDERGARTENS
STUDY
RURAL COMMUNITIES
ENROLLMENT RATES
WAGES
SCIENCE
AGED
VALUES
SCHOOLS
DESCRIPTION
PARTICIPATION
AGE
GENDER
EDUCATION SERVICES
CLASSROOM SETTING
CHILDHOOD
COMPETENCE
HEALTH OUTCOMES
HYPERACTIVITY
PARENTING
ENROLLMENT RATE
HOUSEHOLD
FAMILY PLANNING
EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION
EFFORT
SOCIAL SCIENCE
EARLY CHILDHOOD
EDUCATIONAL SERVICES
MEASUREMENT
NUTRITION
PRIMARY CAREGIVERS
EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES
RISK FACTORS
RETURN TO EDUCATION
WEIGHT
CHILDHOOD CARE
COGNITIVE SKILLS
OBESITY
UNDERSTANDING
PRIMARY SCHOOL PARTICIPATION
CHILDREN
EDUCATION
VILLAGE LEVEL
EARLY INTERVENTION
EARLY INTERVENTIONS
INVESTMENT
HOUSEHOLDS
EQUALITY
RURAL AREAS
COMMUNITY SERVICES
EXPERIENCE
INFANTS
PRIMARY SCHOOL EDUCATION
CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT
INTERACTIONS
COMMUNICATION
INTERVENTIONS
NET ENROLLMENT
COMMUNITY
STRATEGY
SOCIAL PROBLEMS
EPIDEMIOLOGY
FEES
FAMILIES
WOMEN
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS
CLASSROOM
SAFETY
HEALTH SERVICES
IMPLEMENTATION
SERVICE
DISTRICTS
PARTICIPATION RATES
LEARNING ACTIVITIES
RETURNS TO EDUCATION
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
Brinkman, Sally Anne
Hasan, Amer
Jung, Haeil
Kinnell, Angela
Pradhan, Menno
The Impact of Expanding Access to Early Childhood Services in Rural Indonesia : Evidence from Two Cohorts of Children
geographic_facet East Asia and Pacific
Indonesia
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7372
description This paper uses three waves of longitudinal data to examine the impact of expanding access to preschool services in rural areas of Indonesia on two cohorts of children. One cohort was children aged 4 at the start of the project and was immediately eligible for project-provided services when they began operation in 2009. The other cohort was children aged 1 at the start of the project and became eligible for project-provided services two years later. The paper presents intent-to-treat estimates of impact in the short term (first year of the project) and medium term (three years after the project started), using experimental and quasi-experimental methods. For the cohort of 4-year-olds, while the magnitude of the enrollment impact is similar across children from different backgrounds, the impact on child outcomes is larger for children from more disadvantaged backgrounds in the short and medium terms. However, for this cohort of children, it seems that project-provided playgroups encouraged substitution away from existing kindergartens, suggesting that future interventions should incorporate such possibilities into their design. For the average child in the younger cohort, the project led to improvements in physical health and well-being as well as language and cognitive development. For this cohort, there is little evidence of differential impact. This can be explained by the fact that children who enrolled soon after the centers opened (the older cohort) were generally poorer, compared with children who enrolled later (the younger cohort). This may be because of fee increases in project centers as project funding ended.
format Working Paper
author Brinkman, Sally Anne
Hasan, Amer
Jung, Haeil
Kinnell, Angela
Pradhan, Menno
author_facet Brinkman, Sally Anne
Hasan, Amer
Jung, Haeil
Kinnell, Angela
Pradhan, Menno
author_sort Brinkman, Sally Anne
title The Impact of Expanding Access to Early Childhood Services in Rural Indonesia : Evidence from Two Cohorts of Children
title_short The Impact of Expanding Access to Early Childhood Services in Rural Indonesia : Evidence from Two Cohorts of Children
title_full The Impact of Expanding Access to Early Childhood Services in Rural Indonesia : Evidence from Two Cohorts of Children
title_fullStr The Impact of Expanding Access to Early Childhood Services in Rural Indonesia : Evidence from Two Cohorts of Children
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Expanding Access to Early Childhood Services in Rural Indonesia : Evidence from Two Cohorts of Children
title_sort impact of expanding access to early childhood services in rural indonesia : evidence from two cohorts of children
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2015
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/07/24808116/impact-expanding-access-early-childhood-services-rural-indonesia-evidence-two-cohorts-children
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22456
_version_ 1764451126281764864
spelling okr-10986-224562021-04-23T14:04:08Z The Impact of Expanding Access to Early Childhood Services in Rural Indonesia : Evidence from Two Cohorts of Children Brinkman, Sally Anne Hasan, Amer Jung, Haeil Kinnell, Angela Pradhan, Menno SKILLS COMMUNITIES CAREGIVERS RISKS VILLAGES SCHOOL READINESS PEOPLE TEACHERS SCHOOLING PSYCHOLOGY EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT ENROLLMENT ACTIVITIES BIAS GROUPS PEDIATRICS SERVICES COGNITIVE ACHIEVEMENT EARLY CHILDHOOD CARE HEALTH ACCESS TO PRESCHOOL PROJECTS PROJECT NEIGHBORHOODS CARE CENTERS LANGUAGE PUBLIC HEALTH DAY CARE WORK EXPERIENCE KNOWLEDGE COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT EARLY CHILDHOOD INTERVENTIONS CHILDHOOD EDUCATION TRAINING TEACHER TRAINING PARTNERSHIPS PHYSICAL DEVELOPMENT EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT INTERVENTION ABILITY PUBLIC SAFETY CHILD DEVELOPMENT PRESCHOOL ENROLLMENT INDIVIDUAL CHARACTERISTICS NEEDS PRESCHOOLERS LEARNING PRIMARY SCHOOL REASONING TEACHING COGNITIVE OUTCOMES GROSS ENROLLMENT SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT INTERVIEW MENTAL HEALTH DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY KINDERGARTEN ENROLMENT RATES DESIGN PRIMARY SCHOOLS READING GROSS ENROLLMENT RATES EARLY CHILD DEVELOPMENT KINDERGARTENS STUDY RURAL COMMUNITIES ENROLLMENT RATES WAGES SCIENCE AGED VALUES SCHOOLS DESCRIPTION PARTICIPATION AGE GENDER EDUCATION SERVICES CLASSROOM SETTING CHILDHOOD COMPETENCE HEALTH OUTCOMES HYPERACTIVITY PARENTING ENROLLMENT RATE HOUSEHOLD FAMILY PLANNING EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION EFFORT SOCIAL SCIENCE EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATIONAL SERVICES MEASUREMENT NUTRITION PRIMARY CAREGIVERS EDUCATIONAL OUTCOMES RISK FACTORS RETURN TO EDUCATION WEIGHT CHILDHOOD CARE COGNITIVE SKILLS OBESITY UNDERSTANDING PRIMARY SCHOOL PARTICIPATION CHILDREN EDUCATION VILLAGE LEVEL EARLY INTERVENTION EARLY INTERVENTIONS INVESTMENT HOUSEHOLDS EQUALITY RURAL AREAS COMMUNITY SERVICES EXPERIENCE INFANTS PRIMARY SCHOOL EDUCATION CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT INTERACTIONS COMMUNICATION INTERVENTIONS NET ENROLLMENT COMMUNITY STRATEGY SOCIAL PROBLEMS EPIDEMIOLOGY FEES FAMILIES WOMEN ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS CLASSROOM SAFETY HEALTH SERVICES IMPLEMENTATION SERVICE DISTRICTS PARTICIPATION RATES LEARNING ACTIVITIES RETURNS TO EDUCATION HUMAN DEVELOPMENT This paper uses three waves of longitudinal data to examine the impact of expanding access to preschool services in rural areas of Indonesia on two cohorts of children. One cohort was children aged 4 at the start of the project and was immediately eligible for project-provided services when they began operation in 2009. The other cohort was children aged 1 at the start of the project and became eligible for project-provided services two years later. The paper presents intent-to-treat estimates of impact in the short term (first year of the project) and medium term (three years after the project started), using experimental and quasi-experimental methods. For the cohort of 4-year-olds, while the magnitude of the enrollment impact is similar across children from different backgrounds, the impact on child outcomes is larger for children from more disadvantaged backgrounds in the short and medium terms. However, for this cohort of children, it seems that project-provided playgroups encouraged substitution away from existing kindergartens, suggesting that future interventions should incorporate such possibilities into their design. For the average child in the younger cohort, the project led to improvements in physical health and well-being as well as language and cognitive development. For this cohort, there is little evidence of differential impact. This can be explained by the fact that children who enrolled soon after the centers opened (the older cohort) were generally poorer, compared with children who enrolled later (the younger cohort). This may be because of fee increases in project centers as project funding ended. 2015-08-17T19:29:05Z 2015-08-17T19:29:05Z 2015-07 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/07/24808116/impact-expanding-access-early-childhood-services-rural-indonesia-evidence-two-cohorts-children http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22456 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7372 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper East Asia and Pacific Indonesia