“This study shows how important it is to involve parents in the development of key educational skills,” said Karen Bierman, Evan Pugh University Professor of Psychology and lead author of the study.
Children who are ready for school when they enter kindergarten — those who have skills such as following classroom rules, sitting still and listening to directions — are much more likely to succeed throughout their education, Bierman said. However, children from environments that lack educational and financial resources are less likely to have these skills when they start school.
“Head Start, a federally funded preschool program for children from low-income families, gives children with fewer resources a better chance of success in school and later life,” Bierman said. “But the program was not fully bridging the achievement gap between children from lower and higher income households, so we developed REDI to promote the development of school readiness skills. Now, we are seeing those skill improvements pay off over the long term.”
Around 20 years ago, Bierman and her collaborators created and tested REDI, which targeted social-emotional learning and literacy development in Head Start classrooms. Even though the program improved student performance both in emotional and academic skills, some benefits faded by the end of first grade. Later in elementary school, REDI students were performing academically like their peers who had not participated in REDI.
To see if the duration of more benefits could be extended, the researchers developed another program for REDI children’s parents. Parents received coaching on how to build their children’s skills and play-based instructional materials and activities to help connect the home environment with the preschool environment. For example, parents received grocery store props for pretend play, along with coaching on how to support their child’s language and emerging literacy skills using these props.
In this study, the researchers compared 105 Head Start participants who received REDI at school to 95 Head Start participants who received REDI at school and whose parents also received the coaching and materials.
When former REDI participants were in seventh grade, a research assistant from Penn State visited their homes. Students were assessed on their reading achievement and memory skills. They also answered questions about how competent they felt in social situations and how often they associate with children who misbehave or engage in antisocial behavior. Additionally, the students’ language arts teachers completed surveys that ranked students’ social aggression and other antisocial behaviors.
The results demonstrated that the parent program improved children’s abilities in multiple dimensions. Children whose parents had received the coaching scored higher on working memory tasks, and — though it was not statistically significant — they also trended toward better performance in reading. These students were more likely to report feeling socially confident and reported fewer associations with children who misbehave or engage in antisocial behavior. Additionally, their teachers reported that these children displayed lower levels of conduct problems.