articleAmerican Economic Journal Applied EconomicsJun 1, 2009GREEN OA

Early Childhood Intervention and Life-Cycle Skill Development: Evidence from Head Start

John F. Kennedy University

Indexed incrossref

Abstract

This paper provides new evidence on the long-term benefits of Head Start using the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. I compare siblings who differ in their participation in the program, controlling for a variety of pre-treatment covariates. I estimate that Head Start participants gain 0.23 standard deviations on a summary index of young adult outcomes. This closes one-third of the gap between children with median and bottom quartile family income, and is about 80 percent as large as model programs such as Perry Preschool. The long-term impact for disadvantaged children is large despite “fade-out” of test score gains. (JEL H52, J13, I28, I38)

Citation impact

692
total citations
FWCI
74.87
Percentile
100%
References
48
Citations per year

Authors

1

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Head start
  • Disadvantaged
  • Early childhood intervention
  • Quartile
  • Early Head Start
  • Psychology
  • Intervention (counseling)
  • National Longitudinal Surveys
No related works found for this paper.