of child development. There are many other early-childhood tests
that are used for different purposes—such as diagnosis, screening, re-
search, and planning of intervention services.
Tests for diagnostic purposes are administered to individual chil-
dren to obtain a comprehensive picture of a child’s function in a
number of areas. Tests for screening purposes are used to identify in-
dividual children who may be at risk for learning disabilities or devel-
opmental delays, or to evaluate the effect of a specific program.
As a population-based assessment, the EDI is not a diagnostic or screen-
ing tool. It must notbe used to label individual children, identify chil-
dren with specific developmental problems, recommend children for
special education, specify teaching approaches for individual children,
or measure the success or failure of a child’s preschool experience.In countries such as Canada that have universal enrollment in
kindergarten, the EDI could be administered throughout a school sys-
tem. In many developing countries, however, less than 25 percent of
children attend kindergarten and perhaps 50–80 percent attend pri-
mary school beginning in 1st grade.
Measuring Child Development to Leverage ECD Policy and Investment 275Physical and mental health
Social competence
Emotional maturity
Language/cognitive development
Communication/general knowledgeNeighborhood physical and
socioeconomic characteristicsGenesEpigeneticsEnvironment Brain development(genotype)Risk FactorsChildren’s biopsychosocial
development trajectoriesAdditive,interactiveProximal
DistalPregnancy Infancy
(0–2 yrs)EDI score
(5–6 years)Pre-K
(3–4 yrs)Exposure decreasesParents
with age
Exposure increasesPeers
with ageFigure 1. The Early Development Instrument (EDI): Capturing Brain DevelopmentSource:Adapted from Tremblay 2006.