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Featured researches published by Milagros Nores.


Journal of Human Resources | 2006

The High/Scope Perry Preschool Program: Cost–Benefit Analysis Using Data from the Age-40 Followup

Clive Belfield; Milagros Nores; Steve Barnett; Lawrence J. Schweinhart

This paper presents an updated cost-benefit analysis of the High/Scope Perry preschool Program, using data on individuals aged 40. Children were randomly assigned to a treatment or control group. Program costs are compared against treatment impacts on educational resources, earnings, criminal activity, and welfare receipt. Net present values are calculated for participants, the general public, and society. The treatment group obtains significantly higher earnings. For the general public, higher tax revenues, lower criminal justice system expenditures, and lower welfare payments easily outweigh program costs; they repay


Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis | 2005

Updating the Economic Impacts of the High/Scope Perry Preschool Program.

Milagros Nores; Clive Belfield; W. Steven Barnett; Lawrence J. Schweinhart

12.90 for every


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2018

Reporting guidelines for implementation research on nurturing care interventions designed to promote early childhood development

Aisha K. Yousafzai; Frances E. Aboud; Milagros Nores; Raghbir Kaur

1 invested. However, program gains come mainly from reduced crime by males.


Annals of The American Academy of Political and Social Science | 2010

Differences in College Major Choice by Citizenship Status

Milagros Nores

This article derives an updated cost-benefit ratio for the High/Scope Perry Preschool Program, an intensive preschool intervention delivered during the 1960s to at-risk children in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Because children were randomly assigned to the program or a control group, differences in outcomes are probably attributable to program status. Data on outcome differences is now available on participants as they reached the age of 40; outcomes include educational attainment, earnings, criminal activity, and welfare receipt. These outcomes are rendered in money terms and compared to the costs of delivering the program to calculate the net present value of the program both for participants and for society. The data show strong advantages for the treatment group in terms of higher lifetime earnings and lower criminal activity. For the general public, gains in tax revenues, lower expenditures on criminal justice, lower victim costs, and lower welfare payments easily outweigh program costs. At a 3% discount rate the program repays


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2018

Building capacity in health and education systems to deliver interventions that strengthen early child development

Milagros Nores; Camila Fernandez

12.90 for every


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 2018

State of the science on implementation research in early child development and future directions

Frances E. Aboud; Aisha K. Yousafzai; Milagros Nores

1 invested from the perspective of the general public; with a 7% discount rate, the repayment per dollar is


Archive | 2016

The Role of Early Childhood Education in Social Behaviour of Children

Milagros Nores; W. Steven Barnett

5.67. Returns are even higher if the total benefits—both public and private—are counted. However, there are strong differences by gender: a large proportion of the gains from the program come from lower criminal activity rates by the treatment group, almost all of which is undertaken by the males in the sample. The implications of these findings for public policy on early childhood education are considered.


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

Meta‐analyses of interventions such as parenting, stimulation, and early childhood education have reported consistent medium‐to‐high effect sizes on early childhood development (ECD) and early learning outcomes. However, few effective interventions promoting ECD have achieved scale. In order to increase the access to effective or high‐quality services, greater focus on implementation research of interventions promoting ECD is necessary. In this paper, we describe the development of reporting guidelines for implementation research of nurturing care interventions designed to promote ECD following an expert consensus‐building process. The goal of these guidelines is to support a transparent and standard reporting of implementation evidence on nurturing care interventions designed to promote early childhood development.


Archive | 2013

Early Child Development Programs and Research in the United States

Milagros Nores; W. Steven Barnett

Studies about college majors largely ignore non-citizen or immigrant populations. Using the administrative data from two public universities in Texas, the author examine students’ major choices by citizen status. In the context of legislation providing in-state tuition access for undocumented students (H.B. 1403, effective 2001), the author tests the effects of the policy on students’ choices of major. Foreign-born populations have a higher propensity to select majors in Science, Engineering and Math (SEM) and a lower propensity to enroll in social sciences than citizens. Domestic students exhibit variable propensities to opt for SEMs, depending on their race. There is evidence of behavioral changes pre— to post—H.B. 1403, with foreign-born populations shifting away from high-return majors.


HighScope Press | 2005

Lifetime effects: The High/Scope Perry Preschool study through age 40

Lawrence J. Schweinhart; Jeanne Montie; Zongping Xiang; Ws Barnett; Clive Belfield; Milagros Nores; Mi Ypsilanti

Building capacity within health and education systems of low‐ and middle‐income countries in order to deliver high‐quality early childhood services requires coordinated efforts across sectors, effective governance, sufficient funding, an adequate workforce, reliable data systems, and continuous monitoring, evaluation, and improvement cycles; it also requires partnerships with the private sector, communities, and parents. In addition, building capacity requires leadership, innovation of strategies to fit into existing structures, evidence‐based intervention models, and effective partnerships that help make interventions more culturally relevant, help finance them, and help create institutional long‐term support and sustainability for them. In this article, we focus on identifying eight critical aspects of enabling systemic support for early childhood services. Every action that strengthens these critical aspects should be seen as necessary, but insufficient, steps toward a national strong governance structure for delivering a locally relevant and comprehensive early child development program that promotes childrens developmental potentials.

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Camila Fernandez

Mathematica Policy Research

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Carollee Howes

University of California

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