Head Start is a program of the United States Department of Health and Human Services that focuses on assisting three- and four-year-old children from low-income families. Created in 1965, Head Start is the longest-running national school readiness program in the United States. It provides comprehensive education, health, nutrition, and parent involvement services to low-income children and their families. As of late 2005, more than 22 million pre-school aged children have participated in Head Start. The $6.8+ billion dollar budget for 2005 provided services to more than 905,000 children, 57% of whom were four years old or older, and 43% three years old or younger. Services were provided by 1,604 different programs operating more than 48,000 classrooms scattered across every state (and nearly every county) at an average cost of $7,222 per child. The paid staff of nearly 212,000 people is dwarfed by an army of volunteers six times as large.
The Office of Economic Opportunity launched Project Head Start as an eight-week summer program in 1965. The project was designed to help end poverty by providing preschool children from low-income families with a program that would meet emotional, social, health, nutritional, and psychological needs.
Head Start was then transferred to the Office of Child Development in the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare (later the Department of Health and Human Services) by the Nixon Administration in 1969. Today it is a program within the Administration on Children, Youth and Families in the HHS. Programs are administered locally by non-profit organizations and local education agencies such as school systems.
The long term effectiveness of Head Start is controversial. Set out below are a number of critical and positive reports or statements on Head Start. In light of the controversy, Congress commissioned an Impact Statement, which is discussed below.
The authors of Freakonomics find that Head Start has no measurable long term effect on student performance. (cite unavailable in book)
Magnuson, Ruhm, and Waldfogel* conclude that Early education does increase reading and mathematics skills at school entry, but it also boosts children's classroom behavioral problems and reduces their self-control. Further, for most children the positive effects of pre-kindergarten on skills largely dissipate by the spring of first grade, although the negative behavioral effects continue."
However, the study also found that, in contrast to the general population in pre-kindergarten, disadvantaged children and those attending schools with "low levels of academic instruction" get the largest and most lasting academic gains from early education.
Psychometrican Arthur Jensen credits Currie and Thomas (1995) with performing the "most penetrating statistical analysis of Head Start outcome". Currie and Thomas * try to control for many family background factors. The analysis is based on within-family data, comparing childen in Head Start with their siblings who were not in Head Start. Also, mothers who were themselves enrolled in Head Start were compared to their adult sisters who were not. Currie and Thomas analyzed groups separately by ethnicity: White, Black and Hispanic. White children, who were the msot disadvantaged, showed the larger and longer lasting improvements than African-American children.
According to Datta (Datta, 1976 & Lee et al.,1990) who summarized 31 researches, the program showed immediate imrovement in IQ of children who participated in it, though after joining the school the differences between children who participated in the program and others turned to be negligible with the time.
The Head Start Impact Studey First Year Findings were released in June of 2005. The Executive Summary is available online from Health and Human Services.* In the study, approximately 5000 3- and 4-year old children entering the program were assigned, beginning in fall 2002, to either the headstart program or other parent-selected community resources. Thus, the comparison was not between Head Start and no support or educational intervention, but instead between Head Start and a variety of other forms of community support and educational intervention.
The results of the first report showed consistent small to moderate advantages to children from participating in Head Start programs rather than other programs, with a few areas where no impact was reported. The benefits improved with early participation and varied among racial and ethnic groups. The full report provides significant detail and support.
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