Researchers focused on kids that are traditionally at high risk for
mental health problems and academic underachievement – low-income
minority children attending high-poverty urban schools. The
experiment included 10 public schools in New York City serving
predominantly poor, black students.
Half of those schools participated in ParentCorps, a program for
pre-kindergarten families that teaches kids skills like sharing and
expressing their emotions and offers parents coaching in how to
encourage positive behavior in their children.
By second grade, kids at schools with ParentCorps were half as
likely to have clinically significant mental health problems,
compared to peers at non-participating schools, and had higher
teacher-reported academic performances, said lead study author
Laurie Miller Brotman of New York University Langone Medical Center.
“This suggests that ParentCorps delivered as an enhancement to pre-k
programs serving primarily low-income children of color has the
potential to improve population health and reduce disparities,”
Brotman said by email.
“These findings suggest that as early childhood education programs
become increasingly available to 4-year olds throughout the country,
additional investment in supporting parents and early childhood
teachers to create safe, nurturing and predictable environments for
children has the potential to reduce disparities in education and
health,” Brotman added.
The ParentCorps experiment included 423 children and families that
participated in the program and 369 kids at schools without the
program.
Parents attended 13 weekly two-hour sessions devoted to things like
goal-setting and helping children regulate emotions. At the same
time, children attended play-based sessions designed to promote
self-regulation skills like paying attention and identifying
feelings. Teachers also received professional development.
For children in schools without ParentCorps, mental health problems
observed by teachers increased during the study period, while this
remained unchanged in the schools that did have the program.
There was also a less pronounced achievement gap between black and
white students in schools with ParentCorps, the study found.
One way ParentCorps may get results is by reducing stress, the
authors conclude. Even though researchers didn’t measure stress,
many previous studies have linked stressors at home and in the
community to poor behavior and academic performance in school.
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Beyond its small size, limitations of the study include the
potential for teacher ratings of students to be biased because
educators at the ParentCorps schools were aware of the mission, the
authors note. However, second grade teachers didn’t know whether
students had participated in ParentCorps when they were in pre-k,
the authors also point out.
The results also highlight the importance of parental involvement,
Dr. Caroline Kistin, a researcher at Boston University Medical
Center who wrote an accompanying editorial.
“The findings of this study are consistent with previous findings
that the social-emotional health of young children is one of the
biggest factors that impacts school readiness and future school
success,” Kistin said by email. “The parent-child relationship has a
major influence on child social emotional development and can be a
powerful buffer against stress.”
While it’s possible a program like ParentCorps might work
differently outside of New York City, plenty of previous research
suggests that focusing on both school and home environments can have
a big impact on educational outcomes, Kistin added by email.
“A number of studies have demonstrated that high-quality early
education programs can impact child well-being and educational
attainment,” Kistin said. “One of the novel aspects of ParentCorps
is the focus on both the home and the school environments. The
involvement of parents in particular may be the key to decreasing
child stress and improving outcomes in the years that follow.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2dVkCJa and http://bit.ly/2dEEYHT JAMA
Pediatrics, online October 3, 2016.
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