4.7 Article

From Kindergarten readiness to fourth-grade assessment: Longitudinal analysis with linked population data

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
Volume 68, Issue 1, Pages 111-123

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.09.063

Keywords

Early child development; Children; Social determinants of health; Developmental trajectories; Early Development Instrument; Foundation Skills Assessment; British Columbia, Canada; Longitudinal analysis; Neighbourhoods

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Early child development (ECD) - the development of physical, social-emotional, and language-cognitive capacities in the early years - is a foundation of health, well-being, learning, and behaviour across the life course. Consequently, the capacity to monitor ECD is an important facet of a modern society. This capacity is achieved by having in place an ongoing flow of high-quality information on the state of early child development, its determinants, and long-term developmental outcomes. Accordingly, there remains a considerable need for research that merges community-centred, longitudinal, and linked-data approaches to monitoring child development. The current paper addresses this need by introducing one method of summarising and quantifying the developmental trajectories of British Columbian children at the neighbourhood- or district-level: computing the Community Index of Child Development (CICD) for each geographic area. A simple index that describes change in children's developmental trajectories at the aggregate level, the CICD is computable because of our capacity to conduct individual-level linkage of two population data sets: the Early Development Instrument (EDI), a holistic measure of children's readiness for school which is administered at Kindergarten, and the British Columbia Ministry of Education's Foundation Skills Assessment (FSA), a Grade 4 measure of academic skills. In this paper, we demonstrate: (a) wide variation in the CICDs according to the children's district of residence in Kindergarten; (b) an association of the ClCDs with an indicator of the socioeconomic character of the neighbourhoods: and (c) contrasting patterns of neighbourhood convergence and divergence in two different school districts - such that, in some areas, children from high Vulnerability neighbourhoods tend to catch up between Kindergarten and Grade 4 whereas, in other areas, they tend to fall further behind. (C) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved,

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