Enrollment in state-funded pre-K programs prior to kindergarten entry has become increasingly common. As each state develops its own model for pre-K, rigorous studies of the impacts of state-specific programs are needed. This study investigates impacts of the Arkansas Better Chance (ABC) initiative at kindergarten entry using a regression-discontinuity design. In this approach, study selection criteria are known and modeled, rather than simply comparing children who attended ABC with potentially dissimilar children who did not attend. Statistically significant impacts of ABC pre-K participation were found across three key academic domains related to children’s kindergarten readiness—vocabulary, mathematics, and print awareness skills. These results suggest that the ABC pre-K program is effective and thus that it provides a potential model for expansion of large-scale public pre-K initiatives in other states.
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Journals Division
The University of Chicago Press
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Kindergarten Readiness Impacts of the Arkansas Better Chance State Prekindergarten Initiative
Jason T. Hustedt
University of Delaware
Kwanghee Jung and W. Steven Barnett
National Institute for Early Education Research, Rutgers University
Tonya Williams
Division of Child Care and Early Childhood Education, State of Arkansas
ARTICLE CITATION
Jason T. Hustedt, Kwanghee Jung, W. Steven Barnett, and Tonya Williams, "Kindergarten Readiness Impacts of the Arkansas Better Chance State Prekindergarten Initiative," The Elementary School Journal 116, no. 2 (December 2015): 198-216.
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