Longitudinal Follow-up of Children in the National
Evaluation of Early Head
The Early
Head Start Research and Evaluation project, a rigorous, large-scale, random-assignment
evaluation of Early Head Start, was designed to carry out the recommendation
of the Advisory Committee on Services for Families with Infants and Toddlers
for a strong research and evaluation component to support continuous improvement
within the Early Head Start program and to meet the 1994 reauthorization requirement
for a national evaluation of the new infant-toddler program.
The Early Head Start Research and Evaluation project was funded in three waves.
The Congressionally-mandated Birth to Three Phase (1996-2001) included an Implementation
Study, an Impact Evaluation that investigated program impacts on children and
families through their time in the program, and local research projects. In
2001, the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) funded the Pre-Kindergarten
Follow-up Phase (2001-2004) to build upon the earlier research and follow the
children and families who were in the original study from the time they left
the Early Head Start program until they entered kindergarten. In 2005, ACF
funded the Elementary School Follow-up Phase (2005-2010) to again build upon
earlier research and follow the children and families from the original study
while the children are in fifth grade, or attending their sixth year of formal
schooling. At the University of Kansas, Judith Carta and Jane Atwater are the
principal investigators involved in the follow-up of children from Kansas City,
KS.
As the map below indicates, the programs that participated in the Early Head
Start Research and Evaluation project are located in Russellville, Arkansas;
Venice, California; Denver, Colorado (two programs); Marshalltown, Iowa; Kansas
City, Kansas; Jackson, Michigan; New York City; Kansas City, Missouri; Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania; Sumter, South Carolina; McKenzie, Tennessee; Logan, Utah; Alexandria,
Virginia; Kent, Washington; Sunnyside, Washington; and Brattleboro, Vermont.
For information about the project, go to: http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/opre/ehs/ehs_resrch/ehs_overview.html.