Aantekeningen hoorcollege 4 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

C O U R S E   4   -   2 8   F E B R U A R Y   2 0 2 3

Unequal childhoods – concerted cultivation or poverty?

Big picture (1) – the growing ‘skills gap’

  • Social inequality in labor market opportunities, income, health and life expectancy are increasingly dependent on the skills people acquire in the course of their lives.

    • It is about cognitive academic (school) skills, but also about broader non-cognitive skills in the social-emotional domain such as self-esteem, self-control, ability to collaborate, motivation, creativity, and cultural and social capital (deze begrippen worden later verder uitgelegd).
  • Family income (not race, ethnicity, social class as such) is an increasingly important factor explaining inequalities in educational and social opportunities.
    • The higher income families spend an increasing part of their (already higher) income on high quality childcare and after school care, private schools, non-formal shadow education, and informal social, cultural and creative socialization, and sports » all to the benefits of their children
  • Income differences by diploma (1964-2012)
    • Despite increased educational spending and access to education, the income gap by diploma has widened by a factor 2.
    • Even in egalitarian countries like Denmark a multiplication of the income gap has occurred (Heckman, 2020)
    • This has to do with the idea of skills acquisition

Big picture (2) – privatization of education

  • Next to the public education system, there is a growing market of non-formal ‘shadow education’ (e.g. exam training) and informal education in social and cultural skills (music, creativity, sports, science).
  • Non-formal schadow education in The Netherlands: from 26m € per year in 1996 to 284m € in 2018.
  • Shadow education is a widespread phenomenon. There is a strong increase in money that parents spend on extra education for their children.
  • High private costs on shadow education are the major cause of the growing ‘skills gap’

Social and educational inequalities

  • Educational inequalities and, later in life, unequal social opportunities emerge already early and point to unequal childhoods.
  • 60% to 80% of the education gap between children from low and high SES family backgrounds at the end of primary school is already present at age 6, so before formal schooling starts (Skopek et al., 2021).
  • Primary education cannot (greatly) reduce the early gaps and gaps tend to become bigger after transition to secondary education

2 studies om beeld te geven van ‘unequal childhood’:

Early gesturing and vocabulary growth (Rowe & Golding-Meadow, 1999)

  • Even before real language learning starts, there is already a difference between high and low socioeconomic families in how they orchestrate children’s language learning
  • Gesturing (pointing, iconic, enacting) at age 14 months predicts vocabulary at age 54 months (while vocabulary at age 14 months does not)
  • Gestures between parents and child shows strong SES differences. In the higher educated, richer families, there were more varied gestures in their interactions. These gestures explained a rapid growth of vocabulary later on
  • Children’s (imitative) gesturing mediates the effects of parent gesturing on vocabulary growth

Early language processing and vocabulary (Fernhald, Marchman & Weisleder, 2013)

  • (young) Children in higher SES families react already much more accurately to when the parent certain words. They look at the object that is mend by the parent
  • Processing of language correlates with vocabulary growth in early years
  • Gaps increase (substantially) between 18 and 24 months (of age). It’s predicted by how well children attend to verbal input by the parents

Social inequalities emerge already very early in life and are sustained throughout childhood and adolescence. How can we explain this?

»  2 major concepts: concerted cultivation and material deprivation (poverty)

Concerted cultivation (Lareau)

  • Concerted cultivation: the never absent control (oversight) of middle class parents of children’s activities with a long-distant future (broad educational) goal in mind, to have them become capable, talented, assertive, self-regulating and successful citizens.
  • Natural growth: parenting in working and poor families is limited to providing safe, healthy and warm-loving environments to children, where children can thrive and develop ‘naturally’.

Autonomy vs. obedience?

  • We think of individualism as a cultural model that stimulates autonomy
  • Sociocentrism is more about obedience, being respectful, social responsible, etc.
  • Interesting observation regarding individualism and sociocentrism:
    • Bounded autonomy: autonomy and assertiveness as an outcome, embedded in a pedagogical masterplan (in middle class)
    • Actual autonomy: without a future-orientated plan (lower class)
  • ‘In sum, differences in family life lie not only in the advantages that parents are able to obtain for their children, but also in the skills being transmitted to children for negotiating their own life paths…’ (Lareau, 2018).

Cultural and linguistic capital

= taalkundig kapitaal

  • Cultural habitus (Bourdieu): being familiarized from early on with the ways of speaking, appreciating, and talking about (classical) music, fine arts, literature, and the philosophical ideas of the cultural elite.
  • It gives the child ‘cultural and social capital’ » helping the child to adapt to, and feel included in the (secondary) school system and higher education, to establish relationships with like-minded/likewise socialized peers
  • Restricted vs. elaborate code (Bernstein):
    • Style of talking: directives vs. explanations & reasoning, immediate references to the here-and-now (instrumental, functional) vs. non-immediate references to the past/the future/other contexts (informative, educational)
    • Different vocabularies and grammar skills (basic communication vs. academic language)

“Pedagogic action in education is, objectively, symbolic violence first insofar as the power relations between the groups or classes making up a social formation are the basis of the arbitrary power given to the teachers which is the precondition for the establishment of a relation of pedagogic communication, i.e., for the imposition and inculcation of a cultural arbitrary by an arbitrary mode of imposition and inculcation in education.” (Bourdieu & Passeron, 1975)

Culture or poverty? – some nuances

Besproken studie: also in low-income countries/cities, parents want their children to become cultivated (educational aspirations), so they organize (extra-curricular) activities for them

»  Explanatory factors (bij de studie):

  • School-related extracurricular activities: different patterns by country, possibly pointing to targeted remedial programs in some countries and private shadow education in other countries
  • Religious & heritage language activities: strongly predicted by the importance of religion in daily family life (cultural factors)
  • Sports, dance & physical activities and social clubs, scouting, musical & arts activities: strongly negatively predicted by a material deprivation index (‘poverty’) and strongly positively predicted by parental education and the educational aspirations parents hold for their children

What is poverty?

  • The income is not sufficient to meet the everyday needs.

    • It’s about needs considered to be ‘normal’ in society.
    • It’s about income relative to a country’s average income level (e.g., below 60% of the average net income).
  • Poverty is associated with:
    • Low education levels (of parents).
    • Low levels of employment.
    • High levels of psychological stress.
    • Violent, polluted neighborhoods.
    • Lack of access to good quality services

Unexpected expenses, holidays, warming the house in the winter, etc. is hard to afford for many families

What is the problem regarded poverty?

  • Child’s right perspective: all children should be healthy and feeling good, and should be facilitated to develop their potentials
  • Social inequality:
    • Poverty is negatively related to wellbeing, educational achievement and behavioral adjustment
    • Social inequality due to poverty comes with costs for society
  • Intergenerational transmission of poverty » het is waarschijnlijker dat wanneer je zelf arm bent, je dit ook doorgeeft aan de volgende generatie

Effects of income and parental education on early brain development (Noble et al., 2015)

  • Higher family income and parental education are associated with a larger cortical surface and increased hippocampal volume, underlying language, executive functions and memory
  • Associations show a logarithmic shape: income and education are stronger related to brain development at the lower income and education levels.
  • If you give poor families some extra money (it doesn’t have to be much), they often spend it on child care centers, they buy toys and children’s books, sometimes a holiday » they spend the money on concerted cultivation activities. Result: less stress, more parent-child time, more time for conversations with reasoning.

Institutional & policy context

  • Education systems characteristics as related to equal educational and social opportunities:

    • Age of onset formal education: preschool education and care: accessibility, affordability, use, quality
    • Age of transition to (ability) tracks:
      • Educational decision making, role of parents’ voice and background
      • Use of formal standardized (language and culture-fair) tests
    • Degree of tracking and differentiation: opportunities for up-streaming
    • Demands upon parents to support children: part-day (+ homework) vs. whole-day arrangements
  • Findings: early tracking
    • Studies on equity and efficiency of educational systems conclude that early stratification and sorting of students to different tracks of secondary schools tend to increase inequality in academic achievement among students while not improving overall achievement levels at the population level (dus: soort van verlies-verlies situatie)
    • In tracking systems disparities by socioeconomic background in academic achievement and educational attainment tend to be larger as compared to comprehensive systems.

Use of pre-primary ECEC by age of the child

(= Early Childhood Education and Care)​​​​​​​

  • Average patterns, but (large) differences between parents within groups, between groups, between localities and between countries.
  • Overall, much lower level of ECEC use and later increase in participation in the Roma group and, to a lesser degree, the low-income nationals.
  • Explaining patterns of ECEC use by parent and family characteristics:
    • Parents’ education level is a strong positive predictor, parents’ educational aspirations, mothers’ work status, experienced social support, adoptive-acculturation attitudes and inter-ethnic contact are positive predictors too.
    • Importance of religion: This is in daily life a strong negative predictor (pointing to cultural barriers), the number of children in the family and poverty are negative predictors too (pointing to financial barriers).
    • Participation is lower in some countries and in some localities within countries, controlling for all of the characteristics mentioned above, due to system and local policy characteristics.
  • To summarize:
    • Participation in Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) for 0 to 3-year-olds is higher in countries with early entitlement and generous public spending to ECEC.
    • Participation in ECEC for 4 to 6-years-olds approaches the maximum, related to the onset of universal publicly funded preschool-kindergarten systems in most countries.
    • Targeted and culturally inclusive policies explain use in the early years and in particular strong increases in participation by immigrant and low-income groups.

Local inter-agency collaboration and coordinating governance to support families

Opvoeden is heel stressvol, veel ouders zijn onzeker over wat ze doen en hoe ze het aan moeten pakken. Zeker als er ook nog armoede speelt, helpt support heel erg

Case studies of governance models in 10 countries at two of more local sites (informants N=64), resulting in country reports that address:​​​​​​​

  • Degree of decentralization in terms of legal authority, responsibility and budget; principle of subsidiarity.
  • Degree of inter-sectoral integration vs. segregation (e.g., different funding streams, different salaries and working conditions, different ministries, …).
  • Degree of system hybridity: role of public institutions vs. non-governmental charities and idealistic organizations with a social-emancipatory mission.
  • Degree of coordination power at the local level (power of municipalities or of a dominant sector to stimulate or enforce inter-agency collaboration.

To conclude ​​​​​​​

  • ‘Concerted cultivation’ of a broad set of skills in the family and through extra-curricular activities (unequal childhoods) is a major force driving the increasing education gaps and skills-based social inequality (jobs, income, health, life expectancy).
  • ‘Culture’ seems less important as explanatory factor than socioeconomic factors – poverty in particular (negative effect).
  • Also underprivileged poor families, if supported, want their children to develop and acquire broad cognitive and non-cognitive skills.
  • Value-driven local collaboration between governments, NGOs (= non-governmental organisations), churches and community initiatives hold promise.
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Hoorcollege aantekeningen - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

Aantekeningen hoorcollege 1 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

Aantekeningen hoorcollege 1 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

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C O U R S E   1   -   7   F E B R U A R Y   2 0 2 3

Cultural Diversity: policy, care and education in multicultural societies

 

General information

Learning goals:

  • Role of cultural diversity
    • Different theoretical models
    • Childrearing, parenting, child development & education
    • Importance for policy and practice
  • Conduct qualitative study

Goal: develop cultural sensitivity » we moeten voorzichtig zijn in hoe we over andere(n)/culturele groepen praten

Cultural diversity wordt vanuit verschillende perspectieven belicht

»  The Developmental Niche is main theory in this course

Different theories on culture:

  • Ecological theory of Bronfenbrenner
  • Sociocultural theory
  • Individualism vs. rationalism
  • Developmental niche

Superdiversity in The Netherlands

  • Ongeveer 26% van onze bevolking is van origine Nederlands
  • Bijna 90% van de populatiegroei komt door internationale migratie
  • Amsterdam, Rotterdam en Den Haag hebben de meeste culturele diversiteit, namelijk over 50%

Deze diversiteit komt door:

  • Verhuizingen van buiten de EU (bijv. Turkije en Marokko)
  • Toevoeging nieuwe EU-landen, waaruit mensen emigreren
  • Toename instroom vluchtelingen aantal (bijv. uit Afghanistan en Syrië)

Superdiversity also relates to:

  • Rural or urban neighborhood » this provides children different opportunities for education and development
  • Religious or non-religious
  • Differences in family composition
    • Single parent, nuclear (father, mother and a few children), extended family. Single parent and extended family (e.g. grandparents live in the same home) are very common. The nuclear family is no longer the ‘family standard’.  
    • Heterosexual vs. homosexual

All these different types of diversity provide children with differences in context (settings) and the view on their parents and their beliefs on what is        important in upbringing and childrearing

»  We can no longer say there is a majority of one cultural group

The weirdest people in the world

WEIRD-sample: Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic

  • Most behavioral science is based on this sampleThe participants in research are usually from western, high educated (rich) families and industrialized and democratic countries
  • Can we generalize findings based on this research to the general population? Is this sample representative for the general population?

What is culture?

(and how can we define it?)

Vélez-Agosto

  • Bronfenbrenner ecological perspective:
    • Individual and cultural processes as separate entities
    • Culture as
.....read more
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Aantekeningen hoorcollege 2 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

Aantekeningen hoorcollege 2 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

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C O U R S E   2   -   1 4   F E B R U A R Y   2 0 2 3

Cultural identity development

 

Erikson’s psycho-social theory of development

Erikson’s theory is foundational in the identity development of children. The theory follows a social and cognitive development of individuals. These 8 stages focus on collectedness, relatedness and the impact of our interactions in these processes 

  • The lifespan is divided into 8 stages of development, from birth to death.
  • Each stage has a crisis/tension that needs to be resolved and that resolution affects the next stage (the crisis is ‘necessary’ for each stage)
  • How the challenge of each stage is solved impacts personality and identity development.
  • Erikson: the first to recognize the role of social context in identity development. He introduced the term ‘identity crisis’

 

In de volgende 3 fases vind de ontwikkeling van identiteit plaats

Identification in childhood (ages 6-11)

  • Starts when the children recognize themselves as a separate being from their parents (individuals from their parents)
  • The processes of identification in this stage are primarily related to  copying (identyfing with) traits/characteristics of their parents or other significant others.
  • This stage ends when the children experience a desire for uniqueness and greater differentiation from their parents, that’s expressed with a search of differentiation
  • Kinderen hebben al een ego gevormd in deze fase

Identify formation during adolescence (ages 12-24)

In this stage there are a variety of different (intense) changes

  • The stage is characterized by a search for a self-categorization/understanding and existential purpose in the world/role in society.
  • Very important for the development of a sense of well-being, sense of belonging (to a place, group or to one’s body), and for a sense of direction in life.
  • Identity crisis in this stage: sense of loss and confusion; the importance of having outlets of expression.    If you don’t express your identity you can develop an identity crisis
  • You have more questions about who you are, what your purpose in life and your role in society is. Erikson conceptualized that search of purpose in life in terms of ‘occupational purpose.’

Identity development in adulthood (ages 25 and beyond)

  • This stage is defined by a shift of focus from identity concerns towards intimacy issues and bonds with others » this does not mean that the concerns about identity disappear after young adulthood
  • New life events and experiences can still have impact on identity development (e.g. migration, having children, coming out). If you are a parent you start asking yourself which norms, values etc. you want to reflect on your
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Aantekeningen hoorcollege 3 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

Aantekeningen hoorcollege 3 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

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C O U R S E   3   -   2 1   F E B R U A R Y   2 0 2 3

Multicultural society

Acculturation

  • It’s an ongoing process throughout your life
  • It’s a two-way process » how the environment is receiving you and how you adapt to the environment
  • It’s a process of social, psychosocial and cultural change from the encounter between two (or more) cultures. People adopt, acquire and adjust to a new cultural environment as a result of moving into a new culture.
  • Het is een proces dat blijft voortbestaan

Acculturation model at individual level

four different acculturation strategies

  • Integration: people maintain aspects of the heritage culture, while also adopting aspects of the host society/host society culture.
  • Assimilation: fully adopting the host society and losing maintenance of heritage culture.
  • Segregation: maintaining the heritage culture without having a lot of interaction with the host society » focus on own culture.
  • Marginalization: people lose touch with heritage culture but also don’t have (much) contact with the host society

Acculturation model at societal level

  • Multiculturality: A society witch people are integrated. Meaning that people are allowed to maintain aspects of their heritage culture, while also being actively part of the host society.
  • Melting pot: Type of society where people lose (parts of)their heritage culture, or are not in touch with their heritage culture, but mainly adopt the common culture in a country (= assimilation)
  • Segregation: reflects a society with very different groups, different communities, but with very little interaction. Some groups maintain their heritage culture
  • Exclusion: groups that are not part of anything. Individuals or small groups that aren’t part of their own cultural community or they are not able to establish their own cultural community. They’re also not part of the host culture/society.

Terminology and confusion about it

  • The meaning of integration is different than we are used to.
  • Segmented assimilation/selective acculturation: adopting some parts of the host society, but not all

Interdisciplinary framework: culture and adaption

Afbeelding met diagram

Automatisch gegenereerde beschrijving

 

 

 

 

 

 

Global context

Context in which migration takes place

  • Push and pull (factors that make a country (un)attractive) factors
  • Cultural globalization and socialization include new, online and social media
  • Transnational ideologies: beliefs and values systems » xenophobia, islamophobia, long-distance nationalism

Macrosystem

  • National and immigrant policies
    • Regulate influx of immigrants and refugees
    • Educational opportunities (equity)
  • Attitudes towards
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Aantekeningen hoorcollege 4 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

Aantekeningen hoorcollege 4 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

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C O U R S E   4   -   2 8   F E B R U A R Y   2 0 2 3

Unequal childhoods – concerted cultivation or poverty?

Big picture (1) – the growing ‘skills gap’

  • Social inequality in labor market opportunities, income, health and life expectancy are increasingly dependent on the skills people acquire in the course of their lives.
    • It is about cognitive academic (school) skills, but also about broader non-cognitive skills in the social-emotional domain such as self-esteem, self-control, ability to collaborate, motivation, creativity, and cultural and social capital (deze begrippen worden later verder uitgelegd).
  • Family income (not race, ethnicity, social class as such) is an increasingly important factor explaining inequalities in educational and social opportunities.
    • The higher income families spend an increasing part of their (already higher) income on high quality childcare and after school care, private schools, non-formal shadow education, and informal social, cultural and creative socialization, and sports » all to the benefits of their children
  • Income differences by diploma (1964-2012)
    • Despite increased educational spending and access to education, the income gap by diploma has widened by a factor 2.
    • Even in egalitarian countries like Denmark a multiplication of the income gap has occurred (Heckman, 2020)
    • This has to do with the idea of skills acquisition

Big picture (2) – privatization of education

  • Next to the public education system, there is a growing market of non-formal ‘shadow education’ (e.g. exam training) and informal education in social and cultural skills (music, creativity, sports, science).
  • Non-formal schadow education in The Netherlands: from 26m € per year in 1996 to 284m € in 2018.
  • Shadow education is a widespread phenomenon. There is a strong increase in money that parents spend on extra education for their children.
  • High private costs on shadow education are the major cause of the growing ‘skills gap’

Social and educational inequalities

  • Educational inequalities and, later in life, unequal social opportunities emerge already early and point to unequal childhoods.
  • 60% to 80% of the education gap between children from low and high SES family backgrounds at the end of primary school is already present at age 6, so before formal schooling starts (Skopek et al., 2021).
  • Primary education cannot (greatly) reduce the early gaps and gaps tend to become bigger after transition to secondary education

2 studies om beeld te geven van ‘unequal childhood’:

Early gesturing and vocabulary growth (Rowe & Golding-Meadow, 1999)

  • Even before real language learning starts, there is already a difference between high and low socioeconomic families in how they
.....read more
Access: 
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Aantekeningen hoorcollege 5 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

Aantekeningen hoorcollege 5 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

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C O U R S E   5   -   7   M A R C H   2 0 2 3

Inclusion and intercultural competence

Two types of inclusion

  • At the door (acceptability) » who can enter, who can participate?
    • Equal access for everyone
    • Exclusion can be deliberate » it can be a choice. Someone (e.g. the state) can decide for you whether you can participate or not
    • Exclusion as an implicit consequence (e.g. buildings with only stairs or paid access to extracurricular activities)
  • Behind the door (belongingness)
    • Two main elements:
      • Related to diversity (positive attitude towards diversity)
      • Related to well-being (sense of belongingness)
    • Pastori et al. (2019) defines it as a four-step process
      • Inclusion as acknowledging diversity » acknowledging differences
      • Inclusion as valuing diversity » positive attitude towards diversity, viewing it as a good thing
      • Inclusion as accepting diversity » when we acknowledge and value differences, we can accept people for who they are
      • Inclusion as well-being 

What is important to children?

  • Language use
  • Safe spaces for learning
  • Competent professionals

Language use

  • Also called: mother tongue, L1 (first language)
  • In the Netherlands, 1 of 5 children grow up in multilingual households with Dutch as L2
  • Predominant focus on majority language in Europe. Teachers find it very important, they have strong monolingual beliefs (they value the majority language the most)
    • Multilingual beliefs and practices cause shared understanding among teachers (at a local and national level)
    • Multilingual beliefs are stronger for professionals who work with younger children » the professionals who work in e.g. daycare are more positive towards the children’s home language than professionals working with older children
    • Focus on the majority language has led to a devaluation of the home language (teachers say the home language is not as important as the majority language)
      • Use of home language is actively banned in (pre)schools
      • Differences  in appreciation related to cultural-ethnic background and social class
    • Language has a cognitive and social-emotional function
      • Easier to express emotions in L1
      • Language is part of your (social) identity
      • When there are positive multilingual practices and beliefs, it improves children’s well-being
    • Why is inclusion of home languages not common practice in schools?
      • Misconceptions about multilingualism and language development. Teachers believe there are different ‘boxes’ for different languages (parallel monolingualism) and home language portrayed as a barrier to success (deficiency perspective
      • Professionals
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Aantekeningen hoorcollege 6 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

Aantekeningen hoorcollege 6 - Cultural Diversity - Universiteit Utrecht (2022/2023)

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C O U R S E   6   -   1 4   M A R C H   2 0 2 3

Early childhood education and care & school

3 different aspects:

  • Disparities and education gap
  • Role of ECEC and school
  • Classroom experiences and interventions

Disparities – education gap

  • Income stronger predictor of school success than migration background
  • Explanatory factors » various forms of capital
    • Economic capital: financial and material resources
    • Human capital: parental education level; cognitive stimulation
    • Social capital: resources available in network
    • Cultural capital: knowledge, skills and familiarity with dominant culture
  • Upward mobility (i.e. having a lot of access to different sources of capital can also allow you to go beyond what your parents or grandparents have accomplished. You are moving up the social ladder) OR cultural reproduction (i.e. because of the types of capital that you were exposed to, you stay within the same community and basically reproduce the upbringing that you had yourself)?
  • To close the gap you should tackle the source

Role of ECEC – primary education

  • Effects of ECEC: ECEC attendance can partly close the education gap, however several issues stand out:
    • Magnitude (=omvang) of effects dependent on:
      • Quality of the provided care
      • Duration or intensity
    • Accessibility of ECEC » negative social selection tendencies and reduced access to high quality ECEC for disadvantaged families
    • Effects strongest for cognitive and language development and weaker for social emotional development
  • Effects of ECEC in the Netherlands (Dutch study):
    • Short term effects (2-4 years, before enrollment in primary school):
      • More guided and pretend play » better vocabulary skill development
      • Use of an education program (VVE = vroege voorschoolse educatie) » better vocabulary
      • Higher educational quality (= quality of interactions) » better attention skills
    • Long term effects (final grade primary school):
      • Higher intensity from 2 years » better reading skills, less externalizing problem behavior but early high intensity possible risk factor for externalizing problem behavior
      • More literacy activities (= lees- en schrijfactiviteiten) in preschool » better reading skills

Classroom experiences and interventions

Quality universal definition? (Rosenthal, 2003)

Individualism

Collectivism/relationism

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