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Advancing equitable access to high quality early childhood education through a trauma- and resilience-informed community schools approach.

Authors :
Tan, Patricia Z.
Aralis, Hilary
Ijadi-Maghsoodi, Roya
Wang, Evelyn
Kataoka, Sheryl H.
Miller, Kezia
Sinclair, Maegan
Gorospe, Clarissa M.
Delja, Jolie R.
Barrera, Wendy
Lee, Sung-Jae
Mogil, Catherine
Milburn, Norweeta
Paley, Blair
Source :
Early Childhood Research Quarterly. 2024 4th Quarter, Vol. 69, p111-121. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• Under-resourced families experience high trauma rates, which can affect learning. • TRiEE aimed to build capacity for trauma- and resilience-informed services. • Children in TRiEE centers showed large developmental gains. • Trauma-informed services are important for advancing early education equity. Enhancing access to high-quality early childhood education (ECE) represents one promising pathway toward reducing the disparities in school-related outcomes for children from under-resourced and minoritized communities. In this paper we describe the Trauma- and Resilience-informed Early Enrichment (TRiEE) initiative, an innovative community schools (CS) approach to ECE that was designed to bolster the capacity of public pre-K programs to provide holistic, family-centered, and trauma-informed services. As such, TRiEE features the integration of trained psychiatric social workers (PSWs) into one public school district's set of early education centers (EECs). We hypothesized that this approach to ECE could be positively associated with the acquisition of key skills that are foundational to children's school readiness. Student-level de-identified administrative data, drawn from the Desired Results Developmental Profile (DRDP), was obtained from twenty-four TRiEE-affiliated EECs in a large, urban public school district over the course of three academic years. Results from mixed-effects models showed that students at sites actively implementing TRiEE demonstrated significantly greater rates of improvement in socio-emotional, cognitive, and physical outcomes (all p < 0.05) in comparison to children participating in sites which were not yet actively implementing TRiEE. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
08852006
Volume :
69
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Early Childhood Research Quarterly
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179557536
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecresq.2024.06.004