The Early Development Instrument: A Kindergarten Readiness
Download
Report
Transcript The Early Development Instrument: A Kindergarten Readiness
Updated January 2013
“There’s an enormous brain drain being lost in our
country. Children under 5 are not being empowered to
reach their potential and it’s a huge loss to children,
their parents, their community, and our society”
--Neal Halfon, M.D., Director, UCLA Center for Healthier Children,
Families & Communities
“Young children are our last chance at prevention”
--Nina Sazer O’Donnell, Vice President, Education, United Way
Worldwide
2
Project overview
Data--Early Development Instrument implementation
Complete EDI in all schools in partner districts in 3
years (2011-3)—approximately 5,000 children
Move EDI outside Tulsa area (2012-3)
Action--Using results for system improvement
Community response in selected neighborhoods (20123)
School-based responses
3
The Early Development Instrument
Developed in Canada in 1998 and expanding across US
since 2009
Population-based (results for neighborhoods and
schools but not individual children)
Teacher-administered (no child involvement or use of
class time)
Kindergarten level (first comprehensive and
comparable assessment under grade 3)
Multi-domain (not just “academics”)
Evaluations show high reliability, moderate validity,
good predictive validity
4
RESULTS
5
EDI Tulsa Overall Results
3,100 children 2011-12
EDI Domain
All Tulsa
Definitions
Developmentally
“Very Ready”
408 (14%)
75th percentile or higher on 4 or more
of the 5 domains
Developmentally
Vulnerable on 2
or More
Domains
600 (20%) 10th percentile or lower on 2 or more
of the 5 domains
Multiple
Challenge Index
236 (8%)
“Not ready” on 9 or more of the 15
sub-domains
Most are included in
“Developmentally Vulnerable”
6
EDI Sub-domains with High
Vulnerability
EDI Domain
All Tulsa Key sub-domain issues
Vulnerable
Physical Health and
Well-Being
20%
14% not physically ready for school
18% not physically independent
32% not ready in motor skills
Social Competence
15%
18% not ready in approaches to
learning
14% not ready in responsibility and
respect
Emotional Maturity
18%
32% not ready in prosocial/helping
26% not ready in hyperactive and
inattentive behavior
21% not ready in aggressive behavior
Language and
Cognitive Skills
(school-based)
12%
20% not ready in interest in
literacy/numeracy
Communication
Skills and general
knowledge
9%
(no sub-domains)
7
TULSA SUBGROUP
RESULTS
(2011 results only, approximately 1,500 children)
8
Whether Attended Any Pre-K
% Very Ready
% Vulnerable
25%
25%
20%
20%
15%
14%
15%
17%
15%
10%
10%
5%
5%
0%
0%
Pre-K (42% of No Pre-K (58%)
children)
22%
Pre-K*
No Pre-K
* Indicates significantly different from children who did not attend pre-K
9
Whether Enrolled in CAP Age 4
% Very Ready
% Vulnerable
25%
25%
21%
20%
15%
20%
15%
15%
15%
11%
10%
10%
5%
5%
0%
0%
Not CAP (81%
of children)
CAP* (19%)
Not CAP
CAP*
*Indicates results differ significantly from children who were not in CAP at age 4.
Children in CAP at 4 are also significantly less likely to have multiple challenges.
10
% Vulnerable by Preschool
% Vulnerable
25%
20%
23%
18%
15%
14%
15%
12%
10%
5%
0%
No CAP as 3 & No CAP as 3 &
no PreK as 4
PreK as 4
CAP as 3 &
PreK as 4
CAP as 3 &
CAP as 3 &
CAP PreK as 4 non-CAP PreK
as 4
11
% Developmentally Vulnerable
by Domain—CAP Status
25%
20%
15%
10%
CAP at Age 4 (19% of
children)
Not CAP at Age 4 (81%)
5%
0%
12
EDI Maps
13
EDI Maps
Show results by where children live, not where they go
to school
Maps that are not included in this presentation also
show domain vulnerability, socioeconomic status,
community assets identified by CAP.
14
% vulnerable on 2+ domains by
neighborhood, central Tulsa
15
% Vulnerable, Physical Health and WellBeing
16
Next Steps
17
Continue EDIs
In Tulsa
Complete 3rd year EDIs (January-March)
Review results (November)
3 years combined
Can compare with other areas in state for first time
Outside Tulsa
Expanding in north and southeast Oklahoma this
school year
Expecting to expand further in 2013-14.
18
Using EDI results to change
systems
Community continues response (CAP)
Share results with school boards, city leadership, business and
community groups
Use results in ongoing neighborhood efforts (Kendall-Whittier
and Eugene Field)
School-based presentations and discussions
Identifying community partners
Identifying local areas for response
School response (districts)
Review school-level and neighborhood-level results with faculty,
parents, neighborhood groups and determine next steps (with
CAP assistance if desired)
19
For more information
Paul Shinn, Public Policy Analyst, CAP
[email protected]
(918)855-3638
Caleb Gayle, Advocacy and Outreach Specialist, CAP
[email protected]
(918)629-7039
TECCS national site (fact sheets, sample documents,
evaluations, local community efforts, etc.)http://teccs.net/
20