kitchen table math, the sequel: Perry preschool longitudinal study

Monday, February 19, 2007

Perry preschool longitudinal study


As I understand it, there are two preschool programs that worked.

Head Start wasn't one of them.

Perry preschool was.

So was the Abecedarian Project.

This is interesting:

One large study that parents really should know about is Project Follow Through, completed in the 1970s. This was the largest educational study ever done, costing over $600 million, and covering 79,000 children in 180 communities. This project examined a variety of programs and educational philosophies to learn how to improve education of disadvantaged children in grades K-3. (It was launched in response to the observation that Head Start children were losing the advantages from Head Start by third grade.) Desired positive outcomes included basic skills, cognitive skills ("higher order thinking") and affective gains (self-esteem). Multiple programs were implemented over a 5-year period and the results were analyzed by the Stanford Research Institute (SRI) and Abt Associates (Cambridge, MA). The various programs studied could be grouped into the three classes described above (Basic Skills, Cognitive-Conceptual, Affective-Cognitive).

source:
jefflindsay.com

Engelmann has a heartwrending scene early on in The War Against the Schools' Academic Child Abuse where he describes a last-ditch & doomed lobbying attempt to persuade the government to give Head Start an academic mission.

That didn't happen.

Instead Head Start addressed the "whole child," if I may borrow a well-used phrase from our middle school principal: his health needs, his social needs, his (bad) parent or parents and their needs, and all the rest.

In the summer of 1966, the Anti-Defamation League expressed interest in making a film showing the achievements of the disadvantaged black preschoolers we had been working with at the University of Illinois. Two years earlier, these kids had been selected for the project as four-year olds on the basis that they came from homes that were judged particularly disadvantaged and nearly all of them had older siblings in classes for the mentally retarded. These kids came to our school half-days as four-year-olds and as five-year-olds.

The school, The Bereiter-Engelmann preschool, received a lot of bad press. It was called a pressure cooker. Sociolinguists took shots at it on the grounds that we ostensibly did not understand "black English," or even know the difference between "thinking and speaking."

Despite our alleged mental deficiencies, we managed to teach these kids more and make them smarter than anyboy else had done before or after. That was our goal, particularly with this first flight of kids--to set the limits to show what could be done. We felt that this demonstration was particularly important because Headstart was looming in the wings, and it was clearly moving in a direction of being nothing more than a front for public health, not a serious educational project. We saw this as a great contradiction because disadvantaged kids were behind their middle class peers in skills and knowledge.

Kay Hymowitz picks up the story from there:

Head Start rested on the reasonable assumption that crucial to fighting poverty was to compensate for what was—or, more to the point, was not—happening at home. If poor kids arrived at school less prepared than their more well-to-do counterparts, well, then, give them more of what those other kids were getting: more stories, building blocks, and puzzles, more talk, more edifying adult attention—as well as good nutrition and health care....Poor kids would get a concentrated injection of middle-class child rearing in preschool, and they would start school ready to learn, to achieve at the same rate as their better-off peers, and eventually to live as well as they did.

Except it didn’t work out that way....from the first time they parsed the data, Head Start researchers found that while children sometimes enjoyed immediate gains in IQ and social competence, these improvements tended to fade by the time kids hit third grade. The failed promise of Head Start might best be captured by a visit I made several years ago to a Head Start program in a housing project on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, a cheerful and orderly place that would satisfy anyone’s definition of quality child care. As I was leaving, an administrator introduced me to a young woman of 21 or so just arriving with her four-year-old. “This is Sonia,” he said proudly. “She went here when she was a little girl.” Not only had Head Start failed to prevent a poor child from becoming a teen mother, but a Head Start administrator didn’t even seem to think that it was supposed to. For him—and, one suspects, for many teachers and parents—Head Start had come to be nothing more than a nice neighborhood preschool; it wasn’t meant to change lives, and it boasted with institutional pride of what elite private schools and colleges call legacies.

What's Holding Black Kids Back?
City Journal
Spring 2005
and see:

Bridging Gaps Early on in Oklahoma

Failing Grade: Siegfried Engelmann Developed an Amazingly Effective Form of Teaching. Why Don't You Know His Name?
Richard Nadler

2 comments:

KDeRosa said...

Bear in mind that the people behind the Perry Preschool sponsored the elementary school program High Scope which competted in Project Follow Through under real classroom experimental conditions.

It was one of the worst performers in the study, performing below the control group, i.e., Headstart. In the PFT charts, it is listed as "cognitive curriculum." Ironically, it was one of the worst performers when it came to teaching cogntive skills.

Catherine Johnson said...

oh swell

so why do people always cite Perry as a success?