Iowa State University Study - 2003 |
|
|
|
A 2003 study by Iowa State University provides disturbing findings related to the early learning experiences of our state’s children. Key findings in their research are: Much of Iowa's child care is of poor or mediocre quality. Over all, 20% of all observed Iowa child care was judged to be good, 58 percent was judged to be mediocre, and 22% percent was poor. Nearly 20% of the observed infant child care centers in Iowa offered poor quality care; none were offering good quality care. About 40% of the observed family child care homes offered poor quality care. In addition, Iowa’s early childhood caregivers report: Lower levels of education (than other states) Low income Lack of benefits High turnover rates Inadequate training history
Citation:
http://www.extension.iastate.edu/homefamily/children/childcare/research.htm |
|
Studies show that from infancy
through about age 10, brain cells not only form most of the
connections they will maintain throughout life, but during this
time they retain their greatest malleability. Fortunately,
statistics show that a majority of kids do attend at least one
year of preschool. According to the National Institute for Early
Education Research (NIEER), more than two-thirds of 4-year-olds
and more than 40 percent of 3-year-olds were enrolled in a
preschool in 2005. As more children are living in two-parent
working families, it is likely that this number will continue to
increase.
At the same time, not all
preschools are equal. In fact, current research is clear that
only high-quality early childhood experiences demonstrate the
early and lasting effects on brain development and cognition.
Children who experience high-quality, stable preschools engage
in more complex play, demonstrate more secure attachments to
adults and other children, and score higher on measures of
thinking ability and language development. High-quality
environments such as these can predict academic success,
adjustment to school, and reduced behavioral problems for
children throughout elementary school. More children who receive
high-quality early education graduate from high school than the
children who do not receive high-quality early education (65%
vs. 45%), particularly females (84% vs. 32%). Citation: http://nieer.org/resources/policyreports/report6.pdf |
|
Building the foundation for a lifetime of creative learning.
