Early Child Development: informing policy and making it a priority: impact case study

This Young Lives impact case study details the role of early child development in informing policy and making it a priority

Abstract

This Young Lives impact case study details the role of early child development (ECD) in informing policy and making it a priority.

In overview:

  • Good quality early childhood development (ECD), including pre-school education is now widely recognised as a vital tool for transforming young lives.

  • Despite differences in provision between countries, Young Lives research shows that attending pre-school has a significant and long-lasting positive effect on children’ self-esteem, pride and educational aspirations. Children who attend pre-school education perform better in numeracy tests in all countries at all ages.

  • In Ethiopia, Young Lives has informed and advised on the roll-out of O-Class (zero grade) before the start of primary school, providing evidence regarding both supply and demand side constraints on quality ECD.

  • In Peru, Young Lives research helped to strengthen the focus on early learning in government programmes for preschool children.

  • Young Lives was commissioned by the World Bank to use data across all four countries to examine how pre-school experience affected children’ later development. The World Bank commissioned Young Lives in part because it now provides a uniquely long time window to understand the later consequences of early circumstances. This analysis will be published in a forthcoming World Bank report.

Young Lives is an international study of childhood poverty, following the lives of 12,000 children in 4 countries (Ethiopia, India, Peru and Vietnam) over 15 years. Young Lives is funded by the UK Department for International Development

Citation

Young Lives (2018) Early Child Development: informing policy and making it a priority: impact case study

Early Child Development: informing policy and making it a priority: impact case study

Updates to this page

Published 30 June 2018