New Research Reveals Positive Impact of Parents As Teachers on School Readiness
Posted on: Wednesday, 4 April 2007, 12:00 CDT
ST. LOUIS, April 4 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Today, new research was unveiled on the outcomes of Parents as Teachers participation on children's school readiness and how these effects are sustained through third grade. Edward Zigler, Ph.D., Parents as Teachers National Center board of directors member and Sterling Professor of Psychology, Emeritus, at Yale University, presented the findings for the first time at the national Parents as Teachers 2007 Conference in St. Louis. Zigler's co-author, Judy Pfannenstiel, and Susan Stepleton, president and CEO of Parents as Teachers National Center, were also on hand for the announcement.
"These research findings confirm what Parents as Teachers has been saying all along -- providing positive learning experiences starting at birth or earlier is the best way to maximize school readiness and success," said Stepleton. "Now we have even more scientific evidence to validate the need for access to Parents as Teachers for all families."
For more than 20 years, Parents as Teachers National Center, the St. Louis-based, international nonprofit and resource base of Parents as Teachers, has studied, collected and shared with parents information to help them be their child's best first teacher. The results from Zigler's study emphasize the need to continue advocating for early childhood support and parent education.
The study assessed the school readiness and academic achievement of more than 7,000 Missouri children over a five year time period. The results from Zigler's study demonstrate how Parents as Teachers alone, or in combination with other preschool services, can increase a child's learning aptitude regardless of economic status.
-- The research showed that a much higher percentage (82 percent) of children living in poverty who participated in both Parents as Teachers and preschool with greater intensity (a minimum of two years in Parents as Teachers and one year in preschool) entered kindergarten ready to learn than did those who had no involvement in either service (64 percent). -- The same difference in kindergarten readiness was also evident for non- poverty children (93 percent vs. 81 percent). -- In addition, the study evaluated the impact of Parents as Teachers participation on third graders' test scores on the Missouri Achievement Program (MAP) communication arts test. Again, a higher percentage of children who participated in Parents as Teachers and/or preschool reached a benchmark level of performance on the MAP test than did those who had no involvement in either service.
Parent involvement is one area that sets Parents as Teachers apart from other early childhood education programs. Parent surveys showed that parents who participated in Parents as Teachers were more likely to engage in literacy activities with children at home and were more likely to enroll children in preschool. These parenting practices played a direct role in the children's positive outcomes.
"The most important finding in this study is evidence that the Parents as Teachers program improved parenting practices in ways that promote both school readiness and subsequent academic achievement," said Zigler in a previous statement. "Both of these offer potential cost-saving implications for schools in terms of reducing grade retentions and the need for individualized education services."
About Parents as Teachers National Center
Based in St. Louis, Parents as Teachers National Center is the resource base and backbone of Parents as Teachers, a parent education and early childhood development program serving parents throughout pregnancy until their child enters kindergarten, usually age 5. The nonprofit National Center oversees more than 3,000 programs offering Parents as Teachers services nationwide as well as in several other countries. For more information about Parents as Teachers, visit http://www.parentsasteachers.org/.
Parents as Teachers National Center
CONTACT: Kristen Johnson of Parents as Teachers National Center,+1-314-432-4330, ext. 248, kristen.johnson@ParentsAsTeachers.org
Web site: http://www.parentsasteachers.org/
Source: PRNewswire-USNewswire
Related Articles
- Project 'Hangin' Out With My Baby' Launches National Children's Music Giveaway Campaign at California Hospital Medical Center in Los Angeles
- National Children's Study Begins Recruiting Volunteers
- CAS Medical Systems, Inc. Announces Children's National Medical Center Participation in Its 'Center of Excellence' Program; FORE-SIGHT(R) Cerebral Oximeters Sold to Children's National for Use in Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
- The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia Announces New Regional Participant in The National Children's Study
- National Parent-Teacher Organization Selects Symantec As Partner to Raise Awareness of Internet Safety Education
- HCA Virginia and Children's National Medical Center to Collaborate on Pediatric Services for Broadlands Regional Medical Center
- Fitwize 4 Kids and Children's Hospital Foundation Team-Up to Offer Fundraising to Children's National Medical Center
- Children's National Medical Center Successfully Implements Critical Portfolio(TM)
- Teachers of Children With Emotional Disturbance: A National Look at Preparation, Teaching Conditions, and Practices
- The Experiences of Parents of Gifted African American Children: A Phenomenological Study
User Comments (0)


RSS Feeds