Family stress, child care, and early cognitive development in the Millennium Cohort Longview Conference ‘Cognitive Capital’ The Nuffield Foundation London,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Early Childhood Education and Care in Europe: Tackling Social and Cultural Inequalities Early Childhood Education and Care in Europe: Tackling Social and.
Advertisements

Marion Macleod Senior Policy and Parliamentary Officer.
Children,Poverty, Resilience and Criminal Justice Helen Codd
1 Pathways to Wellbeing among Teenage Mothers in Great Britain Gender Equality Symposium Cambridge, September 2008 Ingrid Schoon & Elzbieta Polek Institute.
Following lives from birth and through the adult years Evidence from the Millennium Cohort Study Denise D. Hawkes 29 September 2008 Early.
ESRC Gender Equality Network GeNet Project 2: Biographical Agency and Developmental Outcomes Ingrid Schoon, Andy Ross, Peter Martin, and Steven Hope City.
Time trends in family risks and their impact Stephan Collishaw & Barbara Maughan MRC SGDP Centre Institute of Psychiatry Kings College London.
Discuss strategies to build resilience. Resilience programs typically target the promotion of protective factors such as parenting skills, academic tutoring.
Following lives from birth and through the adult years Evidence from the First Two Surveys of the UK Millennium Cohort Denise D. Hawkes,
2)Do children’s adjustment problems transact over time with parent-teacher communication? Yes. When children showed more externalizing and internalizing.
K.Kiernan University of York Child Well-Being in the Early Years: What Matters? Kathleen Kiernan University of York International Society for Child Indicators.
Angela Donkin UCL Institute of Health Equity Setting the Context JSNA workshop for Southampton.
DivorceDivorce Carolyn R. Fallahi, Ph. D.. Divorce Statistics Changes in divorce from 1960s until now. Following a divorce, 84% of children reside with.
CHILD POVERTY IN WEST VIRGINIA A GROWING AND PERSISTENT PROBLEM Worth Our Care Symposium February 19, 2013 – Charleston Marriot TED BOETTNER Executive.
‘Adjusting to Life Events and Their Impact on Mental Health.’
Children and Poverty McLoyd (1998) Childhood poverty is a major problem in the US –Over 22% of children in the US live in poverty as compared to 9% in.
Early Help Conference Health Matters June 19 th 2014 Muriel Scott Director of Public Health Milton Keynes Council.
Poverty, Adversity and the Wellbeing of people with Developmental Disabilites Eric Emerson.
Poverty Reduction and the Developing Brain Greg J. Duncan.
Mental Health Consequences of Low-Income Housing Niches Susan SaegertGary Evans CUNY Grad CenterCornell University.
 Social & Environmental Variables The effects of SES and Parenting on Cognitive Development.
UNICEF league table, 2008 UNICEF Report Card No.8, OECD countries 10 ‘minimum standards’ for early childhood education and care Ireland came joint.
Taking action on social determinants of health Michael Marmot Wellington July 2011.
Millennium Cohort Study (MCS) Understanding Wales: Opportunities for Secondary Data Analysis Chris Taylor Wales Institute of Social & Economic Research,
SITUATION ANALYSIS AND IDENTIFICATION OF NEEDS IN THE AREA OF FAMILY POLICY IN SLOVENIA Ružica Boškić Child Observatory Social protection Institute of.
1. Fathers in the UK Millennium Cohort Study EUCCONET Workshop Vienna 24 February 2010 Lisa Calderwood Sub-brand to go here CLS is an ESRC Resource Centre.
1. Family change in the first five years of life: new evidence from the UK Millennium Cohort Study Lisa Calderwood Sub-brand to go here CLS is an ESRC.
Using data to inform policies: Reducing Poverty by Supporting Caregivers, People Living With HIV/AIDS (PLWA) and Orphans and Vulnerable Children (OVC)
Northern England Strategic Clinical Network Conference
HIV CENTER for Clinical and Behavioral Studies at NY State Psychiatric Institute and Columbia University Mental Health and Substance Use Problems among.
Ingrid Schoon London, Institute of Education Llakes Conference London, 5-6th July 2010 Planning for the future: Changing education expectations in three.
Wellness in Mind Nottingham City Mental Health and Wellbeing Strategy Homelessness Strategy Group Nov 2014 Liz Pierce, Public Health, Nottingham City Council.
Links to Positive Parenting among African American and Hispanic American Low-Income Mothers Laura D. Pittman Psychology Department Northern Illinois University.
COMMUNITY KNOWLEDGE: Readiness to Learn in Niagara GLORY RESSLER Coordinator Understanding the Early Years TIFFANY GARTNER Data Analysis Coordinator Ontario.
Early Childhood Adversity
The Gingerbread and One Plus One Seminar funded by the Nuffield Foundation The legal and emotional implications of shared parenting-
Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Adults Reading to Two Year Old Children: A Population-based Study Olivia Sappenfield Emory University School of Public Health.
Following lives from birth and through the adult years The Circumstances of Early Motherhood Denise D. Hawkes 19 th December 2007 The.
K.Kiernan University of York What matters for well-being in early childhood? Evidence from the Millennium Cohort Study Kathleen Kiernan University of York.
Strengthening Mental Health Improvement and Early Intervention for Child and Young People in Greater Glasgow and Clyde Tuesday 13 th September 2011 Stakeholders.
BRIEFING KidsMatter. A national priority National Child Mental Health Survey (Sawyer et al., 2000) Australian Health Ministers (2003) Estimates suggest.
The UK Millennium Cohort Study The Long View: Longitudinal Studies in Scotland February Lisa Calderwood Centre for Longitudinal Studies Institute.
Mums with babies/toddlers/pre-schoolers at home What is your age? _______ How many children do you have?________ What are their ages and genders? ___________________________________________________________________________.
Millennium Cohort Study Consultative Conference on Content of Age 3 Sweep CLS, Institute of Education, London University funded by ESRC and ONS-led Govt.
Demographic Trends: Carl Onubogu. Average household income Percentage of population over 25 with less than high school education Percentage.
Following lives from birth and through the adult years The consequences of the timing of motherhood and mothers’ employment on child.
A prospective national study Lucie Cluver, Lorraine Sherr, Mark Orkin, Mark Boyes Suicide and AIDS-affected children in South Africa.
State of the Child: Madison County Developed and Presented by Cecilia Freer, MPA Freer Consulting April 25, Freer Consulting.
Following lives from birth and through the adult years Kirstine Hansen and Denise Hawkes Centre for Longitudinal Studies Institute of.
Early Childhood Poverty and Adult Productivity and Health Greg J. Duncan University of California, Irvine.
Shared Parenting Rob Williams Fatherhood Institute.
Early Childhood Advisory Council and Early Brain & Child Development Meeting Name Presenter Name Date 1.
Childcare Mckim et al., 1999 Studied effects of childcare on attachment Participants: Families with infants between 2 and 30 months Visited homes 2-3 weeks.
Early Maternal Employment and Child Development in 5 OECD Countries ISCI Conference York, 28 July 2011 María Carmen Huerta OECD, Social Policy Division.
Challenges and healthy ageing: the role of resilience across the life course (ResNet) Definitions and determinants of resilience Meeting on May 19 th 2009.
Family Characteristics Effect of parental separation on children's behavior 13.8% of children born in experienced parental separation before age.
Young Children Are Everybody’s Business. Mission : To Improve opportunities for children up to age 8 who are growing up in socially and economically disadvantaged.
Croydon Children and Families Partnership Commissioning priorities 13 February 2013.
Discuss strategies to build resilience. Ackerman (1997)  Methods to build resilience  Group therapy  Peer therapy  Classroom meetings  Individual.
Early Education and Care: an anti poverty strategy? Naomi Eisenstadt 1.
2 The Youngest Americans / A report by The Robert R. McCormick Foundation and Child Trends.
Office of Global Health and HIV (OGHH) Office of Overseas Programming & Training Support (OPATS) Health Emerging Research.
Operationalizing family Examples from the Millennium Cohort Study Lidia Panico Department of Epidemiology and Public Health University College London.
Does Postpartum Depression Affect Employment? Maria Elena Komodromou.
Early Childcare and Child Development
Clustering by characteristic among pre-school children: preliminary patterns, and potential consequences Tammy Campbell, Ludovica Gambaro, Kitty Stewart.
Introduction (Action for Children and me)
Patterns of Parenthood at the beginning of the 21st Century
Ready Families in Ready Communities
Ofsted/CQC Local area SEND inspections: one year on Children’s and young people’s SEND were identified well in the early years, particularly for those.
Presentation transcript:

Family stress, child care, and early cognitive development in the Millennium Cohort Longview Conference ‘Cognitive Capital’ The Nuffield Foundation London, 23 February 2007

Family stress, child care, and early cognitive development in the Millennium Cohort Part 1: Ingrid Schoon and Steven Hope: Material hardship, family processes and child outcomes Part 2: Kirstine Hansen: The Relationship between Childcare and Cognitive Outcomes for Children of Working Mothers

Part 1 Ingrid Schoon and Steven Hope Material hardship, family processes and child outcomes Project funded by the Economic and Social Research Council ESRC Priority Network on Human Capability and Resilience

Research Questions Does the experience of material hardship affect family functioning as well as early cognitive development Are the effects of family poverty on child adjustment mediated through parental distress and parenting behaviour?

Pathways linking economic stress and child development Family Stress Model (Conger et al., 1992, 93; Elder & Caspi, 1988; McLoyd, 1989): –Links family economic stress to problematic adolescent development –Postulates that economic stress affects adolescent adjustment indirectly through family processes (i.e. through parental mood, relationship difficulties, and parenting) – application of model to study of adjustment among young children (Linver, et al. 2002)

The Family Stress Model Material Hardship Parental Depression Parenting Child Adjustment Linver et al., 2002

The Millennium Cohort babies born into families Babies were born between September 2000 and January 2002 in the UK At time of survey most babies were 9- month old Follow-up study at age 36 months

Indicators of Material Hardship Age 9mths % Age 36mths % Home Ownership (no)3330 Overcrowding (yes)87 Receipt of income support (yes)1413 Low income (9 months <£10,400; 36 months <£11,000) 1918 Access to a car / van (no)1312

Maternal psychological distress Age 9 mths: shortened version (9 items) of the Malaise Inventory (Rutter et al., 1970) 36 mths: Kessler K6 (Kessler et al., 2002) Both tests are: → Self completion instruments → good reliability (  >.80) → Good validity (correlates with previously diagnosed depression and currently treated depression)

Parenting behaviour Mother-child relationship (15 item scale, Pianta 1992) – mother report (  =.77) – total score indicates overall positive emotional mother-child relationship

Child Adjustment Cognitive Adjustment Bracken School Readiness Assessment BSRA (Bracken, 2002) - child assessment includes six subtests: Colors, Letters, Numbers/Counting, Sizes, Comparisons, and Shapes British Ability Scales – Subtest Naming Vocabulary Behaviour Adjustment Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) - parental report Correlation between BSRA and SDQ: -.29

Control Variables Mother’s age at birth of child Mother’s education (below GCSE; GCSE and above) Mother’s ethnicity (white versus other) Sex of child Birthweight (< 2500 grams) Prematurity (gestation < 37 weeks)

Direct Association between Hardship and Child Adjustment BetaBeta adjusting for control battery Hardship at 9mths and School readiness at 36 mths Behaviour (SDQ) at 36 mths Hardship at 36mths and School readiness at 36 mths Behaviour (SDQ) at 36 mths.30.20

The Family Stress Model Cognitive outcomes at age 3 years Time weighted Hardship score Mother’s Depression Mother child relationship School Readiness Model Fit: (adjusted model including control variables and sample weights): CFI=.998; rmsea=.019) Control Battery R 2 =.19

The Family Stress Model Cognitive outcomes at age 3 years Time weighted Hardship score Mother’s Depression Mother child relationship Naming Vocabulary Model Fit: (adjusted model including control variables and sample weights): CFI=.998; rmsea=.019) Control Battery R 2 =.18

The Family Stress Model Behavioural adjustment age 3 years Time weighted Hardship score Mother’s Depression Mother child relationship Behaviour Model Fit: (adjusted model including control variables and sample weights): CFI=.978; rmsea=.082) Control Battery R 2 =.45

The Family Stress Model Linking Age 9mths to 36 mths Material Hardship Maternal Depression Pianta School Readiness R 2 =.19 Material Hardship Maternal Depression Model Fit (adjusted model including control variables and sample weights): CFI=.994; rmsea=.058) -.02

The Family Stress Model Linking Age 9mths to 36 mths Material Hardship Maternal Depression Pianta Behaviour R 2 =.46 Material Hardship Maternal Depression Model Fit (adjusted model including control variables and sample weights): CFI=.995; rmsea=.055).07

Summary The experience of material hardship: –effects both cognitive and behavioural adjustment –can exacerbate maternal distress –is indirectly related to less effective parenting Experiences in the family environment mediate the influence of material hardship on child outcomes (after controlling for socio-economic background and biological risk factors) Different mediating processes for cognitive and behaviour adjustment

Conclusion Family stress model is applicable for studying associations between material hardship, family processes, and child adjustment Family environment and parenting have significant influences on early child adjustment Importance of disentangling the mediating pathways for emotional and cognitive adjustment among children growing up in poverty

Part 2 Kirstine Hansen: The Relationship between Childcare and Cognitive Outcomes for Children of Working Mothers

Considering other factors Ingrid’s work looked at family processes and child outcomes. Nowadays, many children are spending time outside of the family being cared for by figures other than their mother, even when they are quite young. The rest of this presentation will look at the association between childcare and children’s outcomes.

Literature The literature which looks at the effect of childcare on children’s cognitive ability shows no consensus. But more recent literature suggests that it depends on the quality of the alternative care provided.

Childcare Quality Characteristics of childcare quality commonly found to be positively associated with child outcomes include: –Qualifications of care providers –Stability of staff –Structure and content of daily activities –Space and facilities

Formal versus informal care It is usually argued that formal care (nurseries/playschools etc) provides higher quality care than informal childcare arrangements (care by relative, friends etc). They offer qualified staff and a structured curriculum with specially equipped facilities. Recent empirical results tend to support this. Gregg et al.2005 show that children of mothers who worked full-time when they were under 18 months who attended day care centres appeared to be protected from any adverse effect of maternal employment. Bernal and Keane 2006 show that formal care may actually have a positive effect on children.

In this presentation we examine associations between the type of childcare and child cognitive outcomes. With particular focus on the effect of formal care compared to informal care. We argue that there are potential reasons informal care may be negatively related to cognitive child outcomes compared to formal care: Informal carers may give the child less attention. Lack structure and content of daily activities. They may be less skilled than mothers or formal carers. Lack of resources. The environment they live in may lack educational stimulation. Lack of interaction with other children.

Informal care We also look within the informal care arrangements. Differentiating care provided by grandparents and that provided by others.

We are also aware that there are likely to be reasons why working mothers may use informal rather than formal care which we need to take account of: Informal care may be used by mothers: Who cannot afford formal care. Who live in areas with supply constraints (Paull and Taylor 2002). Who are not fully informed about the benefits of formal childcare. Qualitative evidence suggests that parental decisions about childcare involve more factors than those relating to child outcomes. Parents tend to place greater emphasis on: finding a safe and healthy environment trust flexibility a convenient location and hours dependability

For these Reasons we Construct the Following Hypotheses: Formal (informal) care will be: –Positively (negatively) associated with child cognitive outcomes. There will be no difference between grandparent care and other types of informal care. Once other factors are controlled for the difference between formal and informal care will be reduced to statistical insignificance

Early Childcare Data Measured at 9 months. Formal care: Nursery/creche, childminder, nanny/au pair. Grandparent care: Any grandparent care – mostly done by the maternal grandmother. Other informal care: Partner, other relatives, friends/neighbours

Childcare use by working mothers at 9 months Around 50 percent of MCS mothers are working by the time their child is 9 months old. A very small percentage are using self provision childcare whilst they are working. The others use some sort of non-maternal care. Percentage using formal care as main care arrangement 40% Percentage using grandparent care36% Percentage using other informal care 24%

Child Outcome Measures Measured at age 3 British Ability Scale (BAS) Naming vocabulary test Bracken School Readiness Colours, numbers, comparisons, letters, sizes, shapes.

Descriptive Statistics 2: Mean Child Outcomes at age 3. Main childcare use at 9 months Cognitive Test BASBracken All Formal care Grandparent care Other informal care Observations5094

Regression models We start with a simple model of our childcare measures (formal care, grandparent care) on our outcome measure (BAS or Bracken standarised score). We build our model sequentially adding in control variables which may affect our relationship of primary interest.

Basic Regression Results: BAS In the basic model we get positive and statistically significant coefficients on both the formal care measure and the grandparent care variable compared to other informal care. Formal care:.243***(.040) Grandparent care:.210***(.041) The difference between formal care and grandparent care is statistically insignificant.

Full Model Regression Results: BAS When we control for additional variables in our full model both coefficients are reduced in terms of magnitude but the grandparent care remains statistically significant compared to other informal care. Formal care:.043(.042) Grandparent care:.119***(.041) The difference between formal care and grandparent care is statistically significant. Grandparent care:.076**(.037) To summarise: When our full set of control variables are added to the model grandparent care is positively associated with BAS vocabulary test scores compared to other types of care.

Basic Regression Results: Bracken School Readiness. In the basic regression of childcare on Bracken test scores both formal care and grandparent care attract positive statistically significant coefficients compared to other informal care. Formal care:.421***(.045) Grandparent care:.147***(.041) However, the difference between formal care and grandparent care is statistically significant and negative. Grandparent care: -.275***(.039)

Full Regression Results: Bracken School Readiness, continued…. When we control for additional variables in our full model the coefficient on formal care is reduced in terms of magnitude but remains statistically significant. Formal care:.194***(.044) But the coefficient on grandparent care is reduced to statistical insignificance. Again the difference between formal care and grandparent care is statistically significant in the full model. Grandparent care: -.145***(.038) To summarise: Formal care is positively associated with Bracken school readiness scores even after controlling for other variables. Once other variables are controlled for the effect of grandparent care cannot be distinguished from the effect of other types of informal care. Both are negatively associated with Bracken scores compared to formal care.

Conclusions so far - BAS For the BAS vocabulary score grandparent care is positively associated with outcomes. This makes sense because grandparents may not be able to provide the academic facilities or stimuli that formal care providers can but they are likely to talk and interact with children more frequently and on a one-to-one basis. Grandparents may talk to children more than other carers, not only because they have more time, but because they compensate for a reduction in physical activities with the child. There is also evidence that suggests that older people, adjusting for qualifications, tend to use grammatically correct sentences and to speak slower to children. Moreover, older people are less likely to tolerate grammatical errors and they resort more than younger people to corrective input when interacting with children which helps develop language. In a sense grandparent care is producing both a quality (of language production) and quantity effect.

Conclusions so far - Bracken For the Bracken School Readiness score formal care is associated with better cognitive outcomes than other types of care. Mentioned possible reasons for this at the beginning of the presentation: formal care is more likely to offer structure and content of daily activities, formal carers are more likely to be trained, more likely to have better facilities and resources and access to more educational stimulation.

Sub-Group Analysis It may be possible that the relationship between childcare and child outcomes differs for different groups. To test this the full specification model was run separately for different groups of children: –Gender –Parental education –Couple status of parents –Age of mother at child’s birth –Ethnicity –Household benefit status

Sub-Group Regressions Sub-groupsBASBracken GrandparentFormalGrandparentFormal Boys.125 (.057)**.076 (.059).027 (.057).154 (.065)** Girls.124 (.050)**.017 (.056).079 (.052).243 (.055)*** Low Educated Mothers.079 (.067).022 (.076)-.040 (.064).083 (.080) High Educated Mothers.146 (.055)***.056 (.053).108 (.054)**.252 (.051)*** Lone Parents.115(.139).068 (.157)-.019 (.150).124 (.159) Couples.122 (.043)***.041 (.044).061 (.040).201 (.046)*** Teen Mother.026 (.091).124 (.128)-.047 (.091).189 (.121) Older Mother.139 (.049)***.069 (.048).073 (.043).232 (.049)*** Non-white-.045 (.154).368 (.166)**-.085 (.200).529 (.164)*** White.128 (.043)***.032 (.044).050 (.040).177 (.045)*** Parents on benefits.093 (.100).047 (.098).110 (.095).198 (.109)* No benefits.129 (.043)***.049 (.046).036 (.044).187 (.049)***

Conclusions so far 2: Analysis at the sub-group level suggests that the positive relationship between childcare type and child outcomes is significant for the more advantaged groups rather than the less advantaged groups. The main exception being ethnic minority groups and the on benefits group. While this latter result may offer hope, the fact that in general it is the more advantaged groups where associations between childcare and cognitive test scores are found, obviously has important policy implications for pre-school inequalities. However, this work is still in progress.

Thank you