Does non-participation in preschool affect children’s reading achievement? International evidence from propensity score analyses

Abstract While expectations are high for early childhood education to support students’ reading literacy, research findings are inconclusive. The purpose of the study is to estimate the effect of preschool non-participation on reading literacy at the end of primary school. That is, what is the avera...

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Main Authors: Nina Hogrebe, Rolf Strietholt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2016-02-01
Series:Large-scale Assessments in Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40536-016-0017-3
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spelling doaj-d7b9373ad6194e8dbe5ae1e70442e07d2020-11-24T20:53:06ZengSpringerOpenLarge-scale Assessments in Education2196-07392016-02-014112210.1186/s40536-016-0017-3Does non-participation in preschool affect children’s reading achievement? International evidence from propensity score analysesNina Hogrebe0Rolf Strietholt1Department of Education, University of MünsterInstitute for School Development Research, Technische Universität DortmundAbstract While expectations are high for early childhood education to support students’ reading literacy, research findings are inconclusive. The purpose of the study is to estimate the effect of preschool non-participation on reading literacy at the end of primary school. That is, what is the average achievement of children who did not attend preschool compared to what it would have been if they had attended preschool? Using PIRLS 2011 data, we employ propensity score matching to approximate a randomized experiment on a large-scale basis to estimate this effect for nine countries. We find that children who did not attend preschool come from disadvantaged backgrounds in all countries. However, with the exception of two countries, our study shows that their reading achievement at the end of primary school is not statistically significantly lower than the performance of matched children from similar backgrounds who attended preschool. Keeping in mind some methodological limitations, we discuss the findings of our study from a policy perspective.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40536-016-0017-3Preschool participationDisadvantaged childrenPIRLSPropensity score matchingReading achievement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nina Hogrebe
Rolf Strietholt
spellingShingle Nina Hogrebe
Rolf Strietholt
Does non-participation in preschool affect children’s reading achievement? International evidence from propensity score analyses
Large-scale Assessments in Education
Preschool participation
Disadvantaged children
PIRLS
Propensity score matching
Reading achievement
author_facet Nina Hogrebe
Rolf Strietholt
author_sort Nina Hogrebe
title Does non-participation in preschool affect children’s reading achievement? International evidence from propensity score analyses
title_short Does non-participation in preschool affect children’s reading achievement? International evidence from propensity score analyses
title_full Does non-participation in preschool affect children’s reading achievement? International evidence from propensity score analyses
title_fullStr Does non-participation in preschool affect children’s reading achievement? International evidence from propensity score analyses
title_full_unstemmed Does non-participation in preschool affect children’s reading achievement? International evidence from propensity score analyses
title_sort does non-participation in preschool affect children’s reading achievement? international evidence from propensity score analyses
publisher SpringerOpen
series Large-scale Assessments in Education
issn 2196-0739
publishDate 2016-02-01
description Abstract While expectations are high for early childhood education to support students’ reading literacy, research findings are inconclusive. The purpose of the study is to estimate the effect of preschool non-participation on reading literacy at the end of primary school. That is, what is the average achievement of children who did not attend preschool compared to what it would have been if they had attended preschool? Using PIRLS 2011 data, we employ propensity score matching to approximate a randomized experiment on a large-scale basis to estimate this effect for nine countries. We find that children who did not attend preschool come from disadvantaged backgrounds in all countries. However, with the exception of two countries, our study shows that their reading achievement at the end of primary school is not statistically significantly lower than the performance of matched children from similar backgrounds who attended preschool. Keeping in mind some methodological limitations, we discuss the findings of our study from a policy perspective.
topic Preschool participation
Disadvantaged children
PIRLS
Propensity score matching
Reading achievement
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40536-016-0017-3
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AT rolfstrietholt doesnonparticipationinpreschoolaffectchildrensreadingachievementinternationalevidencefrompropensityscoreanalyses
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