Preschool Intervention Can Promote Sustained Growth in the Executive-Function Skills of Children Exhibiting Early Deficits

This study examined the effects of the Head Start Research-Based, Developmentally Informed (REDI) preschool intervention on growth in children's executive-function (EF) skills from preschool through third grade. Across 25 Head Start centers, each of 44 classrooms was randomly assigned either to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological science 2017-12, Vol.28 (12), p.1719-1730
Hauptverfasser: Sasser, Tyler R., Bierman, Karen L., Heinrichs, Brenda, Nix, Robert L.
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container_issue 12
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container_title Psychological science
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creator Sasser, Tyler R.
Bierman, Karen L.
Heinrichs, Brenda
Nix, Robert L.
description This study examined the effects of the Head Start Research-Based, Developmentally Informed (REDI) preschool intervention on growth in children's executive-function (EF) skills from preschool through third grade. Across 25 Head Start centers, each of 44 classrooms was randomly assigned either to an intervention group, which received enhanced social-emotional and language-literacy components, or to a "usual-practice" control group. Four-year-old children (N = 356; 25% African American, 17% Latino, 58% European American; 54% girls) were followed for 5 years, and EF skills were assessed annually. Latent-class growth analysis identified high, moderate, and low developmental EF trajectories. For children with low EF trajectories, the intervention improved EF scores in third grade significantly more (d = 0.58) than in the control group. Children who received the intervention also demonstrated better academic outcomes in third grade than children who did not. Poverty often delays EF development; enriching the Head Start program with an evidence-based curriculum and teaching strategies can reduce early deficits and thereby facilitate school success.
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source SAGE Complete A-Z List; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects African Americans
Classrooms
Curricula
Developmental delays
Executive function
Head Start project
Intervention
Poverty
Preschool children
Teaching methods
title Preschool Intervention Can Promote Sustained Growth in the Executive-Function Skills of Children Exhibiting Early Deficits
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