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Early Childhood Education: A Meta-Analytic Affirmation of the Short- and Long-Term Benefits of Educational Opportunity
Some scholars who emphasize the heritability of intelligence have suggested that compensatory preschool programs, designed to ameliorate the plight of socioeconomically or otherwise environmentally impoverished children, are wasteful. They have hypothesized that cognitive abilities result primarily...
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Published in: | School psychology quarterly 2001, Vol.16 (1), p.9-30 |
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Main Author: | |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Some scholars who emphasize the heritability of intelligence have suggested that
compensatory preschool programs, designed to ameliorate the plight of
socioeconomically or otherwise environmentally impoverished children, are
wasteful. They have hypothesized that cognitive abilities result primarily from
genetic causes and that such environmental manipulations are ineffective.
Alternatively, based on the theory that intelligence and related complex human
behaviors are probably always determined by myriad complex interactions of genes
and environments, the present meta-analytic study is based on the assumption
that such behaviors can be both highly heritable and highly malleable.
Integrating results across 35 preschool experiments and quasi-experiments, the
primary findings were: (a) preschool effects on standardized measures of
intelligence and academic achievement were statistically significant, positive,
and large; (b) cognitive effects of relatively intense educational interventions
were significant and very large, even after 5 to 10 years, and 7 to 8 of every
10 preschool children did better than the average child in a control or
comparison group; and (c) cumulative incidences of an array of personal and
social problems were statistically significantly and substantially lower over a
10- to 25year period for those who had attended preschool (e.g., school drop
out, welfare dependence, unemployment, poverty, criminal behavior). The need for
a very large, well-controlled, national experiment to either confirm or refute
these provocative, review-generated findings is discussed. |
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ISSN: | 1045-3830 2578-4218 1939-1560 2578-4226 |
DOI: | 10.1521/scpq.16.1.9.19163 |