1 / 1

Measurement of Child Care Arrangement Stability:

Measurement of Child Care Arrangement Stability: A Review and Case Study Using Oregon Child Care Subsidy Data Roberta B. Weber. Research Questions: 1. What is known about child care arrangement stability? To what extent do the four child care arrangement stability measures that have

nguyet
Download Presentation

Measurement of Child Care Arrangement Stability:

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Measurement of Child Care Arrangement Stability: A Review and Case Study Using Oregon Child Care Subsidy Data Roberta B. Weber • Research Questions: • 1. What is known about child care arrangement stability? • To what extent do the four child care arrangement stability measures that have • emerged in the literature describe the same phenomenon? • How stable are the subsidized child care arrangements of preschool children in • female-headed households? Results Research question1 • Review of Over 30 Years of Child Care Stability Literature • Complexity of stability phenomenon makes measurement challenging • Two major types of child care stability: caregiver and arrangement • Four quantitative measures of child care arrangement stability have emerged • - Number of providers • - Transition: percent who remain with same provider and percent who change providers at least once • - Prime primary provider ratio (months with primary provider who provided the most months of care divided by all • observed months • - Duration of arrangement • Results from studies using the four measures are not comparable due to differences • in study purposes, conceptualization of measures, and methods Data Sources: Oregon Child Care Subsidy Data: October 1997 – September 2001 Oregon Department of Human Services Client Maintenance System Data (parents enrolled in subsidy program) October 1997 – September 2001 • Key Terms • Caregiver—a person who cares for a • child • Provider—a facility in which care is • provided • Primary provider—provider who gave • most hours of care in a month • Arrangement—a unique combination • of a child and a provider • Primary arrangement—arrangement with • most hours in a month Analysis Sample Children under age 5 48,862 Female-headed households 35,538 Primary providers 38,277 Secondary providers 10,321 Primary arrangements 102,852 Secondary arrangements 20,194 Research question 2 • Extent to Which the Four Measures Describe the Same Phenomenon • Three are child-level measures and the fourth, duration, is measured at arrangement level. • Correlation values depend on amount of time children are observed. At 12 months the three child-level • measures are correlated at .83 and higher. • All four measures describe distinct aspect of child care arrangement stability Graphic Representation of Stability of Subsidized Child Care Primary Arrangements of Ten Children Observed for 36 Months Research question 3 • Stability of Subsidized Arrangements of Oregon Children Under Age 5 in Female-headed Households at 12 Months • Children had from 1 to 8 primary providers (M 2.40 SD 1.34) They also had from 0 to 6 secondary providers (M .48 SD .79). • 31% children were with the same primary provider over the 12 months and 69% changed providers at least once. • 73% of the 12 months were with the primary provider who had provided the most hours of care. • Half of arrangements had ended by 3 months; the median increased to 4 months for those children observed for over 3 years. • Stability levels of Oregon children, whose care was subsidized, were lower than stability levels reported from nationally • representative samples, but similar to those found in studies of low-income children participating in assistance programs. Recommendations for future research • Six major recommendations for further research flow from this study: • The analysis using the three child-level stability measures should be done with additional data sets to confirm • that the three measures describe the same construct, stability. Since the fourth measure, duration, is analyzed • at the arrangement level, it cannot be correlated with the three child-level measures. • 2. A team of stability researchers should create consensus on methodology for the four stability measures, use • them on additional data sets, compare findings, and thereby substantively increase knowledge of the level of • stability children experience. • 3. Conduct an ethnographic study of stability of a small subset of families from a sample of families whose child • care arrangement stability is being measured by the four quantitative measures. Use findings to increase • understanding of arrangement stability and to further refine existing measures. • 4. A team of stability researchers should explore adaptation of existing measures or creation of new measures to • better capture the complexity inherent in child care stability. • 5. Using the four stability measures in data sets that include child and family outcome data to test the ability of any • or all of the measures to predict outcomes. • 6. Create and test a model that shows what child, family, and community factors are associated with levels of child • care stability. • Ten cases of children who received subsidy for a total of 36 months are displayed. • First line (yellow) for each child describes months child was observed in subsidy program. • Lines 2 – 11 for each child represents a separate arrangement (see Key) for that child. • Subsidy and arrangement spells (continuous time) are numbered. • Values for the four child care arrangement stability measures are on the far right for each child. • If the end of a first or second arrangement spell was not observed (right censored), the term • “cens” is listed instead of number of months. Contact: Roberta B. Weber, Oregon State University Bobbie.Weber@oregonstate.edu

More Related