Medium-term protective effects of quality early childhood education during the COVID-19 pandemic in Ghana

Publication date

2023-09-18T07:33:20Z

2024-11-01T06:10:07Z

2022-11-01

2023-09-18T07:33:20Z

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic led to extended school closures globally. Access to remote learning opportunities during this time was vastly unequal within and across countries. Higher-quality early childhood education (ECE) can improve later academic outcomes, but longer-term effects during crises are unknown. This study provides the first experimental evidence of how previously attending a higher-quality ECE program affected child engagement in remote learning and academic scores during pandemic-related school closures in Ghana. Children (N = 1668; 50.1% male; Mage = 10.1 years; all Ghanaian nationals) who attended higher-quality ECE at age 4 or 5 years had greater engagement in remote learning (d = .14) in October 2020, but not better language and literacy and math scores. Previous exposure to higher-quality ECE may support educational engagement during crises.

Document Type

Article


Accepted version

Language

English

Publisher

Wiley

Related items

Versió postprint del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13824

Child Development, 2022, vol. 93, num. 6, p. 1912-1920

https://doi.org/10.1111/cdev.13824

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Rights

(c) The Society for Research in Child Development, Inc., 2022