World Bank Document

(Ann) #1

Equality of Opportunity


Poverty and poor child outcomes are closely correlated. Disparities
(or gaps) in both socioeconomic status and children’s development
(e.g., health, behavior, cognitive skills) emerge early in a child’s life,
widen during the early school years, and remain constant after age 8.
Studies show that schooling and school quality account for only a
small portion of the gaps in children’s development and the widen-
ing or narrowing of disparities over time. An important finding is
that parenting behavior and socioeconomic conditions are both asso-
ciated with school readiness (Rock and Stenner 2005).


In fact, a family’s socioeconomic status is a proxy for many underlying
factors affecting school readiness—parents at a lower socioeconomic
status are less likely to talk to or read with their children than are par-
ents at a higher socioeconomic status.

When researchers control for variables pertaining to children’s
early family environment, the gaps and disparities between children
narrow greatly (Rock and Stenner 2005). An assessment of the out-
comes of early child development should thus include, or at least cor-
relate with, socioeconomic factors known to relate to early child de-
velopment. Communities and countries could use this assessment to
improve their understanding of children’s experience early in life, to
identify groups of children at particular risk, and to underpin initia-
tion of ECD policies and programs that could profoundly affect chil-
dren’s later achievement.


State of Research and Application


The development and application of population-based tools for mea-
suring the outcomes of early child development, on entry into kinder-
garten, have begun. Canadian researchers are leading the way. In
parallel, the United Nations’ Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has launched
a multicountry initiative to identify a set of standards of early learning
and development.


272 J. Fraser Mustard and Mary Eming Young

Free download pdf