Login / Signup

A deeper dive, a wider pool: Preschool benefits sustain to first grade on a broader set of outcomes.

Anna D JohnsonAnne PartikaAnne MartinDiane HormDeborah A Phillipsnull null
Published in: Child development (2023)
The current study provides new evidence on the sustained benefits of preschool attendance on a broader range of skills-both academic and executive functioning (EF)-than many prior studies have examined. Using propensity score methods, we predicted children's (N = 920, M age at 1st = 6.5 years) literacy, language, math, and EF skills in kindergarten and again at first-grade (2020-2021) based on whether they had attended public preschool (school-based pre-k; Head Start) versus no preschool. In our race-ethnically diverse sample of children (48% Hispanic/Latinx; 21% Black; 14% White; 9% Native American; 9% multiracial) from low-income families, preschool attenders showed advantages on English literacy, English language, and math in kindergarten, which mostly persisted into first-grade. Preschool did not boost EF in kindergarten or first-grade.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • healthcare
  • autism spectrum disorder
  • health information
  • mental health
  • emergency department
  • skeletal muscle
  • african american
  • weight loss
  • social media
  • optic nerve
  • electronic health record