Improving Access and Quality in Early Childhood Development Programs : Experimental Evidence from The Gambia

Early childhood experiences lay the foundation for outcomes later in life. Policy makers in developing countries face a dual challenge of promoting access to and quality of early childhood development services, but evidence on how to manage this tr...

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Main Authors: Blimpo, Moussa P., Carneiro, Pedro, Jervis, Pamela, Pugatch, Todd
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/319421550087245992/Improving-Access-and-Quality-in-Early-Childhood-Development-Programs-Experimental-Evidence-from-The-Gambia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31275
id okr-10986-31275
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-312752022-09-05T00:21:46Z Improving Access and Quality in Early Childhood Development Programs : Experimental Evidence from The Gambia Blimpo, Moussa P. Carneiro, Pedro Jervis, Pamela Pugatch, Todd EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT EARLY CHILD EDUCATION COGNITIVE STIMULATION TEACHER TRAINING RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIAL DEVELOPMENTAL ASSESSMENT Early childhood experiences lay the foundation for outcomes later in life. Policy makers in developing countries face a dual challenge of promoting access to and quality of early childhood development services, but evidence on how to manage this trade-off is scarce. This paper studies two experiments of early childhood development programs in The Gambia: one increasing access to services, and another improving service quality. In the first experiment, new community-based early childhood development centers were introduced to randomly chosen villages that had no preexisting, structured early childhood development services. In the second experiment, a randomly assigned subset of existing early childhood development centers received intensive provider training. The analysis finds no evidence that either intervention improved average levels of child development. Exploratory analysis suggests that the first experiment, which increased access to relatively low-quality early childhood development services, led to declines in child development among children from less disadvantaged households. The evidence supports that these households may have been steered away from better quality early childhood settings in their homes. Comparisons of observationally similar children across experiments reveal that existing early childhood development centers increased language skills by 0.4 standard deviation relative to the community-based alternative, reflecting differences in program quality. 2019-02-14T18:03:51Z 2019-02-14T18:03:51Z 2019-02 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/319421550087245992/Improving-Access-and-Quality-in-Early-Childhood-Development-Programs-Experimental-Evidence-from-The-Gambia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31275 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8737 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 Africa Gambia, The
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT
EARLY CHILD EDUCATION
COGNITIVE STIMULATION
TEACHER TRAINING
RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIAL
DEVELOPMENTAL ASSESSMENT
spellingShingle EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT
EARLY CHILD EDUCATION
COGNITIVE STIMULATION
TEACHER TRAINING
RANDOMIZED CONTROL TRIAL
DEVELOPMENTAL ASSESSMENT
Blimpo, Moussa P.
Carneiro, Pedro
Jervis, Pamela
Pugatch, Todd
Improving Access and Quality in Early Childhood Development Programs : Experimental Evidence from The Gambia
geographic_facet Africa
Gambia, The
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8737
description Early childhood experiences lay the foundation for outcomes later in life. Policy makers in developing countries face a dual challenge of promoting access to and quality of early childhood development services, but evidence on how to manage this trade-off is scarce. This paper studies two experiments of early childhood development programs in The Gambia: one increasing access to services, and another improving service quality. In the first experiment, new community-based early childhood development centers were introduced to randomly chosen villages that had no preexisting, structured early childhood development services. In the second experiment, a randomly assigned subset of existing early childhood development centers received intensive provider training. The analysis finds no evidence that either intervention improved average levels of child development. Exploratory analysis suggests that the first experiment, which increased access to relatively low-quality early childhood development services, led to declines in child development among children from less disadvantaged households. The evidence supports that these households may have been steered away from better quality early childhood settings in their homes. Comparisons of observationally similar children across experiments reveal that existing early childhood development centers increased language skills by 0.4 standard deviation relative to the community-based alternative, reflecting differences in program quality.
format Working Paper
author Blimpo, Moussa P.
Carneiro, Pedro
Jervis, Pamela
Pugatch, Todd
author_facet Blimpo, Moussa P.
Carneiro, Pedro
Jervis, Pamela
Pugatch, Todd
author_sort Blimpo, Moussa P.
title Improving Access and Quality in Early Childhood Development Programs : Experimental Evidence from The Gambia
title_short Improving Access and Quality in Early Childhood Development Programs : Experimental Evidence from The Gambia
title_full Improving Access and Quality in Early Childhood Development Programs : Experimental Evidence from The Gambia
title_fullStr Improving Access and Quality in Early Childhood Development Programs : Experimental Evidence from The Gambia
title_full_unstemmed Improving Access and Quality in Early Childhood Development Programs : Experimental Evidence from The Gambia
title_sort improving access and quality in early childhood development programs : experimental evidence from the gambia
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/319421550087245992/Improving-Access-and-Quality-in-Early-Childhood-Development-Programs-Experimental-Evidence-from-The-Gambia
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31275
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