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Research Partners

Erikson Institute | Harvard University | Michigan State University | The Pennsylvania State University | University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences | University of Kansas | University of Washington | Utah State University

If you are the Head Start Grantee and would like to update the information on this page, please do so by sending an e-mail to: hs-grantee-update@xtria.com.

Erikson Institute

Project Title:
Ounce Scale Validation Project

Principal Investigator:
Samuel J. Meisels

Project Director:
Kristy Beachy-Quick

Project Funding Years:
2004-2007

Contact Information:
Erikson Institute
420 N. Wabash, 6th Floor
Chicago, IL 60611-5627
Phone: (312) 893-7228, Fax: (312) 755-0133
Email: smeisels@erikson.edu; kbeachy-quick@erikson.edu

Project Abstract:
The Erikson Institute, working with the Ounce of Prevention Fund, the Childcare Network of Evanston and Infant Welfare Society of Evanston, the National Teachers Academy of the Chicago Public Schools, the Carole Robertson Center for Learning, and Erie Neighborhood House will investigate the reliability and validity of the Ounce Scale – a functional assessment of young children’s development from birth through 42 months of age. The Ounce Scale is a performance assessment used in Early Head Start programs to monitor infant, toddler, and young preschoolers’ development and to guide individualized instruction. It is comprised of three elements: Observational Records, Family Albums, and Developmental Profiles and Standards. The Observational Records provide a structured format for organizing direct observations of children’s performance by teachers and caregivers. The Family Albums engage parents in documenting observations of their children’s development and provide parents with a range of activities to promote their children’s development. The Developmental Profiles and Standards allow staff to evaluate their observations of the children and determine whether the child is “Developing as Expected” or “Needs Development” in six areas of development, based on explicit performance standards.

The project will utilize a multi-method strategy that combines both quantitative and qualitative techniques. The overall design of the project is that of a cross-sectional, concurrent validation. Ratings on the Developmental Profiles will be compared to scores on the Bayley Scales of Infant Development-II, the Preschool Language Scale-4, and the Ages and Stages Social-Emotional Questionnaire for 30 children at each of eight age levels (N=240). The sensitivity and specificity of the scale will be assessed. Internal reliability and external validity of the scale will be determined using Rasch analyses and other Item Response Theory models. The utility of the scale for planning and instruction and facilitating understanding of individual children will be evaluated by means of interviews with teachers and parents and through examination of comments in the Family Albums and Observational Records.

Sample:
N=240 children and families

Measures:
Child
Ounce Scale
Bayley Scales of Infant Development, Second Edition
Preschool Language Scale, Fourth Edition
Ages and Stages Social-Emotional Questionnaire (ASQ:SE)

Parent
Parent Interviews
Teacher/Caregiver Interviews

 

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Harvard University

Project Title:
Developing Methods for Tracking Bilingual Children's Early Language Development

Principal Investigator:
Barbara Alexander Pan

Project Funding Years:
2004-2007

Contact Information:
Harvard University
Harvard Graduate School of Education
320 Larsen Hall
Cambridge, MA 02138
Phone: (617) 496-0313, Fax: (617) 495-5771
Email: barbara_pan@harvard.edu

Project Abstract:
Harvard University is partnering with several Early Head Start (EHS)/Head Start programs in Boston and Lawrence, MA, to achieve two primary goals. First, project staff are investigating the feasibility of combining parent and teacher reports of toddlers’ vocabulary over time, with the ultimate goal of developing accurate, efficient means for EHS/Head Start staff to use in assessing and monitoring the vocabulary development of toddlers, particularly those from Spanish-speaking homes. Second, researchers will focus on staff development in order to provide staff with a deeper understanding of language development and attrition in toddlers and preschoolers acquiring more than one language.. Participants will include a sample of approximately 75 toddlers from Spanish-speaking homes and a peer sample of approximately 45 toddlers from English-speaking homes. Children and families enter the study at child age 2, 2½, or 3 years. Children are followed through their pre-kindergarten year of Head Start. Results will be used to inform development of an integrated system to identify appropriate reporter(s) and languages to be assessed, integrate reports from multiple reporters, and to display results over time.

Sample:
Core Sample: N=75 toddlers from Spanish-speaking homes
Peer Sample: N=45 toddlers from English-speaking homes

Measures:
Parent

Parent Interview
The MacArthur Communicative Development Inventory: Words and Phrases
Inventario del Desarrollo de Habilidades Comunicativas-Palabras y Enunciados

Child
Woodcock Language Proficiency Battery-Revised (WLPB-R) - Picture Vocabulary and Memory for Sentences Subtests
Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-III (PPVT-III)
Test de Vocabulario en Imagenes Peabody (TVIP)

Parent-Child Interactions
Spontaneous Speech Samples

 

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Michigan State University

Project Title:
Culturally Sensitive Measurement of Toddler-Parent Mealtime Behaviors

Principal Investigator:
Mildred A. Horodynski

Project Funding Years:
2004-2007

Contact Information:
Michigan State University
College of Nursing
416 West Fee Hall
East Lansing, MI 48824
Phone: (517) 335-6744, Fax: (517) 355-8536
Email: millie.horodynski@ht.msu.edu

Project Abstract:
Michigan State University, working with eight Early Head Start (EHS) programs, will develop culturally sensitive measures for assessing toddler-parent mealtime feeding behaviors. These culturally sensitive measures will be used to (1) identify key issues in mealtime feeding behaviors that will inform appropriate intervention strategies and (2) evaluate family and EHS program progress in the area of toddler-parent mealtime feeding behaviors and toddler nutrition. Participants will include African American mother-toddler dyads (N = 200) and Caucasian mother-toddler dyads (N = 200) enrolled in EHS. The study will be conducted in three phases. Phase one will consist of focus group sessions with low-income, African American families with toddlers, with the goal of tailoring existing instruments developed for Caucasian EHS families with toddlers. Phase two will employ survey methods for collecting information from responses to survey items generated in the focus group sessions, with the goal of testing the psychometric properties of the measure within the two target populations and testing the validity of the self report measure. In Phase three, EHS staff will be trained to use the measurement instruments. The expected outcome of this study will be an observational measure that will directly assess parent-toddler mealtime feeding behavior as well as a companion self-report mealtime behavior measure that is culturally appropriate for use with both African American and Caucasian EHS families with toddlers.

Sample:
N=200 African American mother-toddler dyads
N=200 Caucasian mother-toddler dyads

Measures:
Parent

Toddler and Parent Mealtime Behavior Questionnaire (TPMBQ)
Toddler-Parent Mealtime Observation
Feeding Self-Efficacy Questionnaire
Social Support Instrument

 

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The Pennsylvania State University

Project Title:
Development of Early Arithmetic, Reading, and Learning Indicators for Head Start Populations

Principal Investigator:
James C. DiPerna

Project Funding Years:
2004-2007

Contact Information:
The Pennsylvania State University
105 Cedar Building
University Park, PA 16802
Phone: (814) 863-2405, Fax: (814) 865-7066
Email: jdiperna@psu.edu

Project Abstract:
The Pennsylvania State University will partner with the Lebanon County Head Start Program to develop a set of progress-monitoring measures to assess key early literacy and mathematics skills for 3-and-4-year old children enrolled in Head Start. Specifically, study staff will develop four skill probes in the early literacy domain (alphabet recitation, letter identification, letter-sound correspondence, and phonemic awareness) and four skill probes in the early mathematics domain (number recitation, number identification, counting, and subitizing). Participants will include approximately 200 Head Start children per year. The measures developed for this study can help ensure that children are developing key literacy and mathematics skills and can provide data regarding when a child is at risk of later academic difficulty and would benefit from change in instruction.

Sample:
N=200 Head Start children per year

Measures:
Child

Early Literacy Probes
Early Mathematics Probes
Woodcock-Johnson III Tests of Cognitive Abilities and Achievement
Woodcock Reading Mastery Test-Revised
Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills (DIBELS)
Test of Early Mathematics Ability, Third Edition (TEMA-3)

Teacher
Teacher Ratings of Early Academic Skills and Behavior

 

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University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

Project Title:
The Family Map: An Integrated Assessment of the Parenting Environment in Early Childhood

Principal Investigator:
Leanne Whiteside-Mansell

Project Funding Years:
2004-2007

Contact Information:
Arkansas University Center on Developmental Disabilities
Partners for Inclusive Communities
2001 Pershing Circle, Suite 300
North Little Rock, AR 72114
Phone: (501) 682-9933, Fax: (501) 682-9901
Email: WhitesideMansellLeanne@uams.edu

Project Abstract:
The University of Arkansas will partner with two area Head Start centers to create a comprehensive, user-friendly measure to assess various aspects of the family and home environment. The new measure, The Family Map, will provide comprehensive information on parenting practices, household conditions, and parental characteristics that are associated with child well being. The Family Map will be developed with and validated on European American, African American, and Latino families. A scoring system will be devised that will provide a map to the areas of concern and strength for each family. Data that emerges from this project will be used to examine key issues regarding relations between the family environment and children's well being, with emphasis on examining cultural differences.

Measures:
Preliminary Version of the Family Map

 

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University of Kansas

Project Title:
Partnership to Develop Meaningful Outcome Measures for Early Head Start Children and Families

Principal Investigator:
Judith J. Carta
Dale Walker
Kathleen Baggett

Project Funding Years:
2004-2007

Contact Information:
Judith J. Carta
University of Kansas
Juniper Gardens Children's Project
650 Minnesota Ave. 2nd Floor
Kansas City, KS 66101
Phone: (913) 321-3143, Fax: (913) 371-8522
Email: Carta@ku.edu

Dale Walker
University of Kansas
Juniper Gardens Children's Project
650 Minnesota Ave. 2nd Floor
Kansas City, KS 66101
Phone: (913) 321-3143, Fax: (913) 371-8522
Email: Walkerd@ku.edu

Kathleen Baggett
University of Kansas
Juniper Gardens Children's Project
650 Minnesota Ave. 2nd Floor
Kansas City, KS 66101
Phone: (913) 321-3143, Fax: (913) 371-8522
Email: kbaggett@ku.edu

Project Abstract:
The Juniper Gardens Children's Project at the University of Kansas will work with two Early Head Start (EHS) program partners to develop and validate two measures; one for monitoring children’s growth in communication and one for monitoring change in parent’s responsiveness toward children. Participants will include 175 EHS children and families who will be involved in longitudinal studies examining the concurrent and predictive validity of the proposed progress monitoring measures. Following the development of these measures, project staff will develop and test an infrastructure for helping sites become self-sufficient in using data from the new measures to make program decisions at the program and individual child and family levels. Finally, project staff will develop a website that provides support for training EHS staff on the measures and for using the data to make individual and program level intervention decisions. The result of the activities and the studies in this project will be a set of two new measures that are reliable and valid, are related conceptually and empirically to children's readiness for preschool, and are feasible and have demonstrated utility when implemented by EHS program staff.

Sample:
N=175 children and families

Measures:
Child

Early Communication Indicator (ECI)
Indicator of Parent-Child Interaction (IPCI)
Preschool Language Scale
Ages & Stages Questionnaire
Preschool Comprehensive Test of Phonological Processing
Preschool Oral Language and Early Literacy Indicators
Brief Infant-Toddler Social Emotional Assessment-Parent Version (BITSEA)
Child Behavior Checklist
Referral for Intervention Services

Parent
Adult-Adolescent Parenting Inventory 2 (AAPI-2)
Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment (HOME)

 

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University of Washington

Project Title:
Incorporating an Attachment Q-Set Into Parent-Child Relationship Assessment and Support in Early Head Start

Principal Investigator:
Susan Spieker

Project Funding Years:
2004-2007

Contact Information:
University of Washington
Box 357920
Seattle, WA 98195-7920
Phone: (206) 543-8453, Fax: (206) 685-3349
Email: spieker@u.washington.edu

Project Abstract:
The University of Washington-Puget Sound Educational Service District Early Head Start (EHS) Program Partnership will assess the reliability, validity, and utility of the Toddler Attachment Sort-45 (TAS45) for measuring parent-child attachment relationships for low-income children. Project staff will also train staff and supervisors at the EHS program to use and incorporate the TAS45 into periodic assessments of child development and develop a dissemination package promoting the use of the TAS45 to assess and support parent-child attachment relationships. Participants will include 115 children in a home-based EHS program and 150 children in a center-based EHS program. Project results will contribute to the body of knowledge about the adaptation of research-based tools into best practices of an EHS program.

Sample:
N=115 children from a home-based program
N=150 children from a center-based program

Measures:
Child

Toddler Attachment Set 45 (TAS45)
The Communication and Symbolic Behavior Scale (CSBS)
The Preschool Language Scale Fourth Edition (PLS-4) English Edition

Parent
The Brief Infant-Toddler Social & Emotional Assessment-Revised (BITSEA)

Parent-Child
Reciprocity rated from videotapes of free play.

 

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Utah State University

Project Title:
PICCOLO: Parent Interactions with Children-Checklist of Observations Linked to Outcomes

Principal Investigator:
Lori Roggman

Project Funding Years:
2004-2007

Contact Information:
Utah State University
Department of Family Consumer & Human Development
2905 Old Main Hill
Logan, UT 84322-2905
Phone: (435) 797-1545, Fax: (435) 797-3845
Email: falori@cc.usu.edu

Project Abstract:
Utah State University will partner with area Early Head Start programs to develop a measurement tool for observing, tracking, and supporting parent-child interactions that lead to positive child outcomes from infancy to age three. The primary objectives for the study are to: (1) develop a valid, reliable measure of early parent-child interaction, (2) assess the usefulness of the measure for Early Head Start staff who will observe parenting interactions, and (3) develop supporting materials in English and Spanish. To develop the initial version of this measure, parent-child interactive behaviors will be defined in easily observable terms, tested by observers viewing an archive of over 1,500 videotapes of parent-child interaction, and analyzed in relation to previously measured global dimensions of parent-child interactions, children’s attachment security, and children’s developmental outcomes. A revised version of the measure will be tested on a new sample of 200 families, with 600 new observations. The proposed measure will expand Head Start’s tracking of program effectiveness and progress for programs that aim to improve parent-child interactions.

Sample:
N=1,300 archived videotapes of parent-child interaction
N=200 new families

Archived Measures:
Child

Bayley Scales of Infant Development Mental Development Index (MDI)
Bayley Scales of Infant Development Behavior Rating Scale (BRS)
Comprehensive Test of Phonological Processing (CTOPP)
Developing Skills Checklist (DSC)
Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-III (PPVT-III)
Story and Print Concepts
Woodcock-Johnson Tests of Achievement – Applied Problems, Letter Word, and Picture Vocabulary Subscales
Sustained Attention/Staying on Task Subscale of the Leiter-Revised Sustained Attention Task

Mother
Attachment Q-sort
Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL)
MacArthur Communicative Developmental Inventory (CDI)
Social Skills Rating System (SSRS)