Welch, NU team awarded childcare evaluation grant

From left: Iheoma Iruka, Helen Raikes, Julia Torquati and Greg Welch.
From left: Iheoma Iruka, Helen Raikes, Julia Torquati and Greg Welch.

While childcare shapes the trajectory of future generations, evaluating its impact is far from child’s play.

Led by Greg Welch, UNL research associate professor, a multi-campus University of Nebraska team recently received funding to evaluate and inform childcare quality in Nebraska and across the country.

The project, housed in the Nebraska Center for Research on Children, Youth, Families and Schools, will identify minimum thresholds of childcare quality needed to promote positive development and prevent negative outcomes for children birth to age five.

By identifying these thresholds, the team aims to inform Quality Rating and Improvement Systems—a childcare assessment used by 37 states, including Nebraska. Research findings may also help nationwide childcare providers determine whether their programs are affecting children’s outcomes.

“There is a widespread focus on improving childcare quality throughout the whole system, which includes federal education programs and individual childcare providers,” said Helen Raikes, UNL professor and co-principal investigator. “Our research links these two systems together by informing quality ratings and improvements, which creates uniformity. It is a market strategy to improve childcare quality across the board.”

To better understand minimum thresholds, research team members from UNL, the Buffett Early Childhood Institute and the University of Nebraska Medical Center will compare and replicate analytic strategies across six early childhood datasets—five national and one from Nebraska.

The team will also investigate whether thresholds of quality vary according to family resources, child characteristics, child minority status and cultural background, and program context. The project is the first of its kind being done with Nebraska data, Welch said.

“Given the number of representative datasets in this study, it has potential to have a very significant role in local, state and national conversations about early childhood education and quality of care,” said Welch, who also directs CYFS’ Bureau for Education Research, Evaluation and Policy.

The project expands upon similar research funded in 2009. Its current scope, analyzing data across multiple datasets, is rare, said Raikes, who worked on the initial project and continues to serve on its current team.

“Our topic has tremendous implications for policy and practice,” Raikes said. “We know that early childhood quality affects developmental outcomes. It is important to move the entire childcare system to a higher level of quality.”

The project is funded by the Administration on Children and Families, and the research team includes:
Greg Welch, UNL research associate professor at the Nebraska Center for Research on Children, Youth, Families and Schools
Helen Raikes, UNL professor of child, youth and family studies
Julia Torquati, UNL professor of child, youth and family studies
Iheoma Iruka, director of research and evaluation at the Buffett Early Childhood Institute
Barbara Jackson, UNMC professor and director of the Munroe Meyer Institute’s Interdisciplinary Center for Program Evaluation and Department of Education and Child Development
Lisa Knoche, UNL research associate professor and director of CYFS’ Nebraska Early Childhood Research Academy

More details at: http://go.unl.edu/r3t7