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International Journal of Behavioral Development | 2002

Scaffolding in low-income mother-child dyads: Relations with joint attention and dyadic reciprocity

Jason T. Hustedt; C. Cybele Raver

This study was conducted to further extend scaffolding research to low-income dyads because living in poverty may serve as a risk factor for experiencing difficulties in social and cognitive development during childhood. Scaffolding was examined in the context of mother-toddler dyads’ (N = 56) performance of a routine feeding task that was difficult for 2-year-olds to complete independently. Both verbal and nonverbal behaviours were microanalytically coded in order to characterise the successive scaffolding strategies by mothers, and their children’s responses. Also, scaffolding data were compared to data on joint attention and dyadic reciprocity obtained from a free-play task. Results show that mothers’ use of constructive verbal strategies during the feeding task was positively associated with joint attention and mother-initiated dyadic reciprocity, both of which may be viewed as indices of maternal sensitivity. Thus, the provision of verbal assistance may be one mark of maternal sensitivity during scaffolding in low-income dyads.


Educational Policy | 2011

Financing Early Childhood Education Programs: State, Federal, and Local Issues.

Jason T. Hustedt; W. Steven Barnett

The landscape of financing early childhood education in the U.S. is complex. Programs run the gamut from tuition-supported private centers to public programs supported by federal, state, or local funds. Different funding streams are poorly coordinated. The federal government funds several major targeted programs that are available only to specific subgroups of children. States have also tended to offer targeted programs, though in recent years several states have committed to serving all children at age 4. Types of finance models used in state preschool initiatives are examined in detail, and future opportunities to build a more cohesive system are explored.


Journal of Research in Childhood Education | 2015

The Role of Previous Mother-Child Scaffolding in Head Start Children’s Structuring of Problem-Solving Tasks With a Peer

Jason T. Hustedt

This study further extends scaffolding research to mother-child dyads (N = 51) in poverty, examining relationships between maternal scaffolding and 4-year-old Head Start children’s own later scaffolding behaviors. At Time 1, experimental group children received maternal scaffolding during problem-solving tasks, whereas control group children carried out the tasks without assistance. At Time 2, all children provided scaffolding to a novice adult who acted as a peer unfamiliar with the task. Verbal and nonverbal scaffolding strategies were coded, and children’s verbal skills and social competence were measured. The simple presence or absence of earlier scaffolding did not differentiate child tutors. However, tutoring strategies used by experimental group children during the child-novice problem-solving task were similar to those used earlier by their mothers. After controlling for children’s verbal skills and social competence, mothers’ use of active nonverbal strategies (but not active verbal strategies) was predictive of similar behaviors in their children.


Journal of Research in Childhood Education | 2018

While Kindergarten Has Changed, Some Beliefs Stay the Same: Kindergarten Teachers’ Beliefs About Readiness

Jason T. Hustedt; Martha J. Buell; Rena A. Hallam; Wendy M. Pinder

ABSTRACT Kindergarten has become increasingly academically oriented, and U.S. kindergarten teachers are increasingly called upon to implement policies that require assessment and promote accountability. However, little recent research has focused on kindergarten teachers’ beliefs about kindergarten readiness. The authors examined teachers’ beliefs related to what entering kindergartners should be able to do, and beliefs about using assessment data, based on results from statewide surveys of Delaware kindergarten teachers conducted in 2000 (N = 171), in 2011 (N = 185), and again in 2013 (N = 257). Chi-squared tests were employed to investigate potential changes in teacher beliefs over time. Results show that kindergarten teachers increasingly prioritize assessment information across all broad domains of development at kindergarten entry. However, when ranking specific readiness skills, they continue to believe that nonacademic skills are most important. These findings suggest that though policies promote an academic emphasis in kindergarten, teachers, as policy enactors, take a more nuanced view and continue to recognize nonacademic skills as a key component of kindergarten readiness. This has potential implications for early care and education programming, teacher preparation programs, and teachers’ practices in kindergarten classrooms.


AERA Open | 2018

State Prekindergarten Effects on Early Learning at Kindergarten Entry: An Analysis of Eight State Programs:

W. Steven Barnett; Kwanghee Jung; Allison H. Friedman-Krauss; Ellen Frede; Milagros Nores; Jason T. Hustedt; Carollee Howes; Marijata Daniel-Echols

State-funded prekindergarten (preK) programs are increasingly common across the country. This study estimated the effects of eight state-funded preK programs (Arkansas, California, Michigan, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oklahoma, South Carolina, and West Virginia) on children’s learning using a regression discontinuity design. These programs vary with respect to the population served, program design, and context. Weighted average effect sizes from instrumental variables analyses across these states are 0.24 for language (vocabulary), 0.44 for math, and 1.10 for emergent literacy. Differences in effect sizes by domain suggest that preK programs should attend more to enhancing learning beyond simple literacy skills. State preK programs appear to differ in their effects. We offer recommendations for more rigorous, regular evaluation.


Journal of Childhood Studies | 2017

Children’s Responses to Different Types of Teacher Involvement During Free Play

Juana Gaviria-Loaiza; Myae Han; Jennifer A. Vu; Jason T. Hustedt

This qualitative study uses secondary data from videos of 11 teachers in community childcare settings to explore the different roles that teachers use to facilitate play and the way children respond to teachers’ behaviours within these roles. Results suggest that specific teacher behaviours within the roles they adopt elicit three types of children’s responses: ignore/reject, evaluative, and acceptance behaviours. The co- player and play leader roles were often associated with children’s acceptance behaviours and were considered more appropriate for teachers to support children’s development.


Archive | 2016

Meaningful Family Engagement in Early Care and Education Programs: The Role of Home Visits in Promoting Positive Parent-Child Interaction

Rena A. Hallam; Myae Han; Jennifer A. Vu; Jason T. Hustedt

Abstract Family engagement is a central tenet of high-quality early education practice. However, the ways in which programs interact with families have varied significantly over time and in relationship to program type. This chapter extends traditional notions of family involvement by emphasizing the potential of early care and education programs to effectively support parents and other primary caregivers in enhancing daily interactions with their children. Specifically, home visits are described as an important mechanism to influence parent-child interaction particularly when intentional, evidence-based curricula are employed. In recent years, there has been an increasing focus on developing and implementing such home visiting models. In this chapter, we describe a specific example of the integration of the Promoting First Relationships (PFR) parent-child interaction curriculum (Kelly, Zuckerman, Sandoval, & Buehlman, 2008) into home visits in both home and center-based Early Head Start practice. Implementation aspects for enhancing existing family engagement strategies with an intentional home visiting curriculum are discussed with recommendations for future programming and research.


National Institute for Early Education Research | 2008

The State of Preschool 2008: State Preschool Yearbook.

W. Steven Barnett; Dale J. Epstein; Allison H. Friedman; Judi Stevenson Boyd; Jason T. Hustedt


Zero to Three | 2013

Parenting Interventions in Early Head Start: The Buffering Toxic Stress Consortium.

Lisa J. Berlin; Clancy Blair; Misty L. Boyd; John N. Constantino; Rena A. Hallam; Myae Han; Jason T. Hustedt; Brenda Jones Harden; C. Cybele Raver; Michelle Sarche; Jennifer A. Vu; Sarah Enos Watamura; Aleta Meyer; Christine K. Fortunato


Archive | 2010

The New Mexico PreK Evaluation: Impacts From the Fourth Year (2008-2009) of New Mexico's State-Funded PreK Program

Jason T. Hustedt; W. Steven Barnett; Allison H. Friedman

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Myae Han

University of Delaware

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Carollee Howes

University of California

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