Publication | Closed Access
Evaluating Preschool Programs When Length of Exposure to the Program Varies: A Nonparametric Approach
342
Citations
45
References
2004
Year
Kindergarten EducationEducationPreschool DevelopmentNonexperimental DataEarly Childhood EducationExposure DurationChild Mental HealthProgram EvaluationChild CareEarly Childhood ExperiencePreschool ProgramsChild AssessmentPublic HealthEarly Life ExposureDevelopmental EpidemiologyStatisticsHealth SciencesChild PsychologyChild Well-beingSchool PsychologyNonparametric ApproachEarly Childhood DevelopmentProgram VariesChild DevelopmentEarly EducationChild HealthPediatricsBolivian Preschool ProgramPreschool EducationEducation Policy
Nonexperimental data are used to evaluate impacts of a Bolivian preschool program on cognitive, psychosocial, and anthropometric outcomes. Impacts are shown to be highly dependent on age and exposure duration. To minimize the effect of distributional assumptions, program impacts are estimated as nonparametric functions of age and duration. A generalized matching estimator is developed and used to control for nonrandom selectivity into the program and into exposure durations. Comparisons with three groups—children in the feeder area not in the program, children in the program for ≤ 1 month, and children living in similar areas without the program—indicate that estimates are robust for significant positive effects of the program on cognitive and psychosocial outcomes with ≥ 7 months' exposure, although the age patterns of effects differ slightly by comparison group.
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