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IV. TESTING FOR DOSAGE-OUTCOME ASSOCIATIONS IN EARLY CARE AND EDUCATION

Xue, Yange; Miller, Elizabeth B; Auger, Anamarie; Pan, Yi; Burchinal, Margaret; Tien, Hsiao-Chuan; Peisner-Feinberg, Ellen; Zaslow, Martha; Tarullo, Louisa
PMCID:7462421
PMID: 27273507
ISSN: 1540-5834
CID: 4529372

Child Care Enrollment Decisions Among Dual Language Learner Families: The Role of Spanish Language Instruction in the Child Care Setting

Miller, Elizabeth B
Data from the Head Start Impact Study (N = 1,141) and the Head Start Family and Child Experiences Survey, 2009 Cohort (N = 825) were used to describe child care enrollment decisions among Spanish-speaking Dual Language Learner (DLL) families. In particular, logistic regression models tested which child, family, and institutional characteristics predicted enrollment in early care and education (ECE) settings that used Spanish for instruction versus enrollment in settings that did not use Spanish. Results showed that whether the child's first language was exclusively Spanish and whether other DLL families previously attended the ECE arrangement strongly predicted whether that child enrolled. Policy implications for Head Start-eligible Spanish-speaking DLLs are discussed.
PMCID:4754984
PMID: 26900255
ISSN: 0885-2006
CID: 4529362

The Role of Access to Head Start and Quality Ratings for Spanish-Speaking Dual Language Learners' (DLLs) Participation in Early Childhood Education

Greenfader, Christa Mulker; Miller, Elizabeth B
Data from the Head Start Impact Study (N = 4,442) were used to test for differences between Spanish-speaking Dual Language Learners (DLLs) and monolingual English-speaking children in: (1) Head Start attendance rates when randomly assigned admission; and (2) quality ratings of other early childhood education (ECE) programs attended when not randomly assigned admission to Head Start. Logistic regressions showed that Spanish-speaking DLL children randomly assigned a spot in Head Start were more likely than monolingual-English learners to attend. Further, Spanish-speaking DLLs not randomly assigned a spot in Head Start were more likely to attend higher-quality ECE centers than non-DLL children. Policy implications are discussed, suggesting that, if given access, Spanish-speaking DLL families will take advantage of quality ECE programs.
PMCID:4088314
PMID: 25018585
ISSN: 0885-2006
CID: 4529342

Young children and e-reading: research to date and questions for the future

Miller, Elizabeth B.; Warschauer, Mark
ISI:000337242600002
ISSN: 1743-9884
CID: 4581832