Family play, reading, and other stimulation and early childhood development in five low‐and‐middle‐income countries

Author:

Cuartas Jorge12ORCID,McCoy Dana1,Sánchez Juliana3,Behrman Jere4,Cappa Claudia5,Donati Georgina6,Heymann Jody7,Lu Chunling8,Raikes Abbie9,Rao Nirmala10,Richter Linda11,Stein Alan61213,Yoshikawa Hirokazu14

Affiliation:

1. Harvard Graduate School of Education Cambridge Massachusetts USA

2. Centro de Estudio sobre Seguridad y Drogas (CESED) Universidad de los Andes Bogota Colombia

3. Facultad de Economía Universidad de los Andes Bogota Colombia

4. Department of Economics University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia Pennsylvania USA

5. Data and Analytics Section UNICEF New York New York USA

6. Department of Psychiatry University of Oxford Oxford Oxfordshire UK

7. WORLD Policy Analysis Center University of California Los Angeles California USA

8. Brigham & Women's Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

9. College of Public Health University of Nebraska Omaha Nebraska USA

10. Faculty of Education University of Hong Kong Hong Kong China

11. DSI‐NRF Centre of Excellence in Human Development University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg South Africa

12. MRC/Wits Rural Public Health and Health Transitions Research Unit (Agincourt) School of Public Health Faculty of Health Sciences University of the Witwatersrand Johannesburg Gauteng South Africa

13. African Health Research Institute Durban South Africa

14. NYU Global TIES for Children Center New York New York USA

Abstract

AbstractThis paper used longitudinal data from five studies conducted in Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, Ethiopia, and Rwanda to examine the links between family stimulation and early childhood development outcomes (N = 4904; Mage = 51.5; 49% girls). Results from random‐effects and more conservative child‐fixed effects models indicate that across these studies, family stimulation, measured by caregivers’ engagement in nine activities (e.g., reading, playing, singing), predicted increments in children's early numeracy, literacy, social‐emotional, motor, and executive function skills (standardized associations ranged from 0.05 to 0.11 SD). Study‐specific models showed variability in the estimates, with null associations in two out of the five studies. These findings indicate the need for additional research on culturally specific ways in which caregivers may support early development and highlight the importance of promoting family stimulation to catalyze positive developmental trajectories in global contexts.Research Highlights Research on the links between family stimulation and early childhood development in low‐and‐middle‐income countries (LMICs) is limited. We used longitudinal data from studies conducted in five LMICs to examine the links between family stimulation and early childhood development outcomes. Results suggest that family stimulation predicted increments in children's numeracy, literacy, social‐emotional, motor, and executive function skills. We found variability in the observed estimates, with null associations in two out of the five studies, suggesting the need for additional research in LMICs.

Funder

UK Research and Innovation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience,Developmental and Educational Psychology

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