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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
This study examined the joint effects of home environment and center-based child care quality on
children’s language, communication, and early literacy development, while also considering prior developmental
level. Participants were 95 children (46 boys), assessed as toddlers (mean age = 26.33 months;
Time 1) and preschoolers (mean age = 68.71 months; Time 2) and their families. At both times, children
attended center-based child care classrooms in the metropolitan area of Porto, Portugal. Results from
hierarchical linear models indicated that home environment and preschool quality, but not center-based
toddler child care quality, were associated with children’s language and literacy outcomes at Time 2.
Moreover, the quality of preschool classrooms moderated the association between home environment
quality and children’s language and early literacy skills – but not communication skills – at Time 2, suggesting
the positive cumulative effects of home environment and preschool quality. Findings further
support the existence of a detrimental effect of low preschool quality on children’s language and early
literacy outcomes: positive associations among home environment quality and children’s developmental
outcomes were found to reduce substantially when children attended low-quality preschool classrooms.
Description
Keywords
Child care quality Home environment quality Language and communication development Early literacy
Citation
Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 28, 94-101