Improving early childhood development in rural Ghana through scalable low-cost community run play schemes

Author(s):  
Sonya Krutikova
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Salifu Amadu ◽  
Orazio Attanasio ◽  
Bet Caeyers ◽  
Sarah Cattan ◽  
Lina Cardona Sosa ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (6) ◽  
pp. e001724 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann M Weber ◽  
Marta Rubio-Codina ◽  
Susan P Walker ◽  
Stef van Buuren ◽  
Iris Eekhout ◽  
...  

IntroductionEarly childhood development can be described by an underlying latent construct. Global comparisons of children’s development are hindered by the lack of a validated metric that is comparable across cultures and contexts, especially for children under age 3 years. We constructed and validated a new metric, the Developmental Score (D-score), using existing data from 16 longitudinal studies.MethodsStudies had item-level developmental assessment data for children 0–48 months and longitudinal outcomes at ages >4–18 years, including measures of IQ and receptive vocabulary. Existing data from 11 low-income, middle-income and high-income countries were merged for >36 000 children. Item mapping produced 95 ‘equate groups’ of same-skill items across 12 different assessment instruments. A statistical model was built using the Rasch model with item difficulties constrained to be equal in a subset of equate groups, linking instruments to a common scale, the D-score, a continuous metric with interval-scale properties. D-score-for-age z-scores (DAZ) were evaluated for discriminant, concurrent and predictive validity to outcomes in middle childhood to adolescence.ResultsConcurrent validity of DAZ with original instruments was strong (average r=0.71), with few exceptions. In approximately 70% of data rounds collected across studies, DAZ discriminated between children above/below cut-points for low birth weight (<2500 g) and stunting (−2 SD below median height-for-age). DAZ increased significantly with maternal education in 55% of data rounds. Predictive correlations of DAZ with outcomes obtained 2–16 years later were generally between 0.20 and 0.40. Correlations equalled or exceeded those obtained with original instruments despite using an average of 55% fewer items to estimate the D-score.ConclusionThe D-score metric enables quantitative comparisons of early childhood development across ages and sets the stage for creating simple, low-cost, global-use instruments to facilitate valid cross-national comparisons of early childhood development.


2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 222
Author(s):  
Desni Yuniarni

<p>The learning media has an important role in a learning activity, especially for early childhood education. Media in learning functions to facilitate the student in a learning activity. Through the media, it will be easier for children to comprehend the material as well as making learning activity becomes more fun. Besides, the using of media in learning will stimulate all the children's development aspect. The Pontianak city itself has many local resources that can be used as learning media in kindergarten. The using of local resources as a learning media, in addition to low cost has many benefits, i.e. introducing the various local resources around the children. By getting to know about those resources, it is hoped that the children will be proud and love their city more. But, the phenomenon in kindergarten is teachers prefer the factory-made learning media even though many more benefits for both teachers and children for using the media from their local resources. Thus, the study aims to find out about the teacher's perception toward learning media that based on local resources in kindergarten in Pontianak city. This is a quantitative descriptive study in a survey form. The sampling method used was purposive sampling. The data was obtained using a questionnaire and interview. Data were then analyzed using quantitative descriptive percentage analysis. The study finding shows that 75% of kindergarten teachers in Pontianak city agreed that the using of learning media that based on local resources, it is important for early childhood development; total 36% teachers agreed on the benefits that the students get in using the learning media that based on local resources, while 45% of teachers did not really agree with using that media in learning activities in kindergarten.</p>


1988 ◽  
Vol 33 (8) ◽  
pp. 730-730
Author(s):  
No authorship indicated

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