Appendix C - Summary Report

Appendix C NHES Summary Report 2011-2012 Field Test.doc

National Household Education Surveys Program (NHES: 2011/2012) Field Test

Appendix C - Summary Report

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Appendix C

NHES:2011 Summary Report of Extant Survey Research
for NHES Topics










NHES:2011

Summary Report

of Extant Survey Research

for NHES Topics



February 2009


Chris Chapman

Project Officer

National Center for Education Statistics (NCES)

U.S. Department of Education



Prepared by

Julie Keith

Akemi Kinukawa

Lina Guzman

Child Trends

This page is intentionally blank.



Table of Contents

Early childhood program participation (ECPP) 1

The Cost, Quality, and Child Outcomes in Child Care Centers Study 3

Current Population Survey, October School Enrollment Supplement 5

Early Childhood Longitudinal Study- Birth Cohort 7

The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort 9

The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort of 2010-11 (ECLS-K:11) 11

The Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study 13

Head Start Family and Child Experiences Survey 15

National Child Care Survey 1990: Parent Study 18

National Evaluation of Welfare-to-Work Strategies (NEWWS) – Child Outcomes Study 20

The National Household Education Surveys Program, Early Childhood Program Participation
Survey 2005
22

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Study of Early Child Care and Youth
Development
24

The National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (Canada) 26

National Study of Child Care of Low-Income Families – Community Survey 28

The National Survey of America’s Families 30

The National Survey of Children’s Health 32

National Survey of Families and Households 34

Panel Survey of Income Dynamics, Child Development Supplement 37

Partnership Impact Research Project 39

Survey of Income and Program Participation– Child Care Topical Component 41

Survey of Program Dynamics (SPD) 43

Women’s Employment Study 45

parent and family involvement in education (PFI) 47

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 49

National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 Cohort 52

The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort 54

The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort of 2010-11 56

Educational Longitudinal Study of 2002 58

Family Involvement in Education: A National Portrait 60

Hand in Hand National Parent Survey 62

Head Start Family and Child Experiences Survey 64

National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988 67

The National Household Education Surveys Program, Parent and Family Involvement in
Education Survey
69

National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Study of Early Child Care and Youth
Development
71

The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health 73

The National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (Canada) 75

The National Survey of America’s Families 77

The National Survey of Parents of Public School Students 79

Panel Study of Income Dynamics, Child Development Supplement 81

Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) 83

Prospects: The Congressionally Mandated Study of Educational Growth and Opportunity 85

Survey of Family and School Partnerships in Public Schools, K-8 87

Survey of Adults and Youth 89

Survey of Program Dynamics (SPD) 91

Women’s Employment Study 93


















Early childhood program participation (ECPP)

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TITLE


The Cost, Quality, and Child Outcomes in Child Care Centers Study


PURPOSE


The study was designed to examine the influence of center-based child care on children’s development during the preschool years and as they move into elementary school.


SPONSORSHIP


This research project was funded by grants from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the William T. Grant Foundation, the JFM Foundation, the A.L. Mailman Family Foundation, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, the Pew Charitable Trusts, the USWEST Foundation, the Smith Richardson Foundation, and the Educational Research and Development Centers Programs as administered by the Office of Educational Research and Improvement (now the Institute of Education Sciences).


DESIGN


This longitudinal study included a stratified random sample of children and families from 401 randomly selected child care centers, half for-profit and half non-profit, in four states (California, Colorado, Connecticut, and North Carolina). The sample included a total of 826 children, with an average age of 4.3 years old and in their next to last year of preschool child care. These children were followed for 4 years (until average age of 8 years old). Data were collected to examine the relations between child care quality and children’s development. Data were collected through (1) classroom observations, (2) individual child assessments, (3) teacher ratings of children, and (4) parent reports of child and family characteristics.


PERIODICITY


The longitudinal study began in 1993 and continued for 4 years, until 1997. Data was collected during children's last two years in child care, during kindergarten, first and second grade years. There are no plans for another study at this time.


CONTENT


The study investigated the relationship between child care quality, including cost, and children’s patterns of development from preschool through the second grade. The study assessed the influence of center-based child care in America on children in areas such as cognitive and social skills, children’s relationships with their teachers, and the long-term affects of child care quality on children. Children’s background characteristics were also accounted for to determine if differences between children of different backgrounds emerged. This study measured two dimensions of child care quality: classroom practices and teacher-child relationships. Classroom practices were examined with a variety of observational instruments that measured the quality of the child care environment, teacher sensitivity and responsiveness, and teaching style. The key research question guiding this study was: "Do early child care experiences have long-term consequences for children's development over the time period from the preschool years into the early elementary years?” In addition, parents provided information on their child bearing beliefs and practices annually through a self-administered version of the Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment scale.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The Cost, Quality, and Child Outcomes study sample was limited to 401 center-based care programs in four states, and focused on the association between program quality and child development. The advantage of this study compared to the ECPP is that it is a longitudinal survey and therefore it can be used to examine the association between child care quality and child development. However, the Cost, Quality, and Child Outcomes study is not a national survey and cannot provide national estimates over time, nor can it provide information on other types of care (e.g., relative and non-relative care). It particularly focuses on center-care quality and child development and its content is not as comprehensive as the ECPP. Another difference between the two surveys is the quality measure: the Cost, Quality, and Child Outcomes study measures quality based on classroom observations and teachers' reporting on their beliefs and practices while the ECPP has measured quality through parent report (i.e., Emlen scale).


AVAILABILITY


For more information on the Cost, Quality, and Child Outcomes Study contact:


Dick Clifford Ph.D., Co-director

FPG Child Development Center
CB #8040, UNC-CH Campus
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-8040

Phone: (919) 962-4737
Fax: (919) 962-7328


Email: [email protected]


Donna M. Bryant, Ph.D., Co-director

FPG Child Development Center
CB #8180, UNC-CH Campus
Chapel Hill, NC 27599-8180


Phone: (919) 966-4295
Fax: (919) 966-7532


Email: [email protected]


More detailed information can be found online at:


http://www.childcareresearch.org/location/ccrca341


http://www.fpg.unc.edu/~NCEDL/PDFs/CQO-es.pdf



TITLE


Current Population Survey, October School Enrollment Supplement


PURPOSE


The purpose of the Current Population Survey (CPS) is to provide estimates of employment, unemployment, and other characteristics of the labor force for the population at large and various subgroups of the population. The October School Enrollment Supplement provides specific information on the educational status of individuals in the population by demographic and socioeconomic characteristics.


SPONSORSHIP


The Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Bureau of the Census have jointly sponsored the CPS, with data collection conducted by the Census Bureau. The Department of Education sponsors additional questions on educational issues that change from year to year.


DESIGN


The Current Population Survey is designed to be representative of the civilian, non-institutionalized population of the United States, including Armed Forces personnel living off base or on base with their families. The CPS uses a probability sample based on a multistage stratified sampling scheme. In general, the sample is selected by (a) grouping counties or groups of counties into primary sampling units (PSUs) that are assembled into homogeneous strata within each state; (b) selecting one PSU to represent each strata; and (c) selecting addresses within each PSU for membership in the sample. These steps result in 2,007 CPS PSUs in the United States from which to draw the sample. There is no oversampling of minority or low-income areas.


Each month, data is collected from approximately 60,000 sample households across the country. Households are in a rotating sample so that they are interviewed each month for 4 months, followed by an 8-month “rest period,” and then interviewed for the next 4 months. Interviews are conducted in person during the first and fifth month that households are in the sample; otherwise interviews are conducted by telephone (by a field interviewer or from a centralized telephone interviewing facility). The household respondent must be a knowledgeable household member aged 16 years or older from the civilian; this respondent provides information for each household member. The questions in the school enrollment supplement are asked about all persons aged 3 or older in the household. The sample size for children in each 1-year age group is approximately 2,000.


PERIODICITY


The supplement has been conducted each October since 1946. Plans include retaining this supplement in the future.







CONTENT


Each year the basic school enrollment supplement contains questions on highest grade completed, enrollment status, and if enrolled, the grade or level of school, type of school (public or private), and whether the child attends center-based care, Head start, or pre-kindergarten. Additional questions on educational topics are also included, but the topics change each year. Topics from the October supplements of CPS related to the ECPP include information on child care and educational experiences (October 1992); whether a child receives any schooling at home (October 1994); proficiency in English and disability status (October 2004); and the use of the Internet (October 2007).



LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


Given that the CPS October Education supplement is in fact a supplement to another major survey, it cannot provide information on the breadth of education-related topics that have been covered by the ECPP, nor the depth of questions on certain subjects.


AVAILABILITY


The Census Bureau usually releases reports on supplement data approximately 3 to 6 months after data collection, and final reports within 12 to 18 months. Published tabulations on school enrollment are available in the Current Population Reports, Series P-20.


Public use microdata files are available from the Bureau of the Census for months in which there is a supplement; these files are usually made available within 6 months to 1 year after data collection.


For further information on the October supplement to the CPS, contact


Hyon Shin

Education and Social Stratification Branch

Population Division

U.S. Bureau of the Census

Washington, D.C. 20233-8800


(301) 763-6169


Email: [email protected]


Data are also available through their web site


http://www.bls.census.gov/cps

TITLE


Early Childhood Longitudinal Study- Birth Cohort


PURPOSE


The purpose of the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study- Birth Cohort (ECLS-B) is to provide valuable detailed information on the early years of children’s lives, from birth through kindergarten entry including topics such as health care, nonparental care, and education. Specifically, the study is interested in gaining insight into how children’s neighborhoods, families, health care, and early childhood program participation influence variations in developmental outcomes.


SPONSORSHIP


The study is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), in collaboration with the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the National Institutes for Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), and the Administration for Children, Youth, and Families (ACYF).


DESIGN


The ECLS-B is a longitudinal study consisting of a nationally representative sample of approximately 14,000 children born in the year 2001. Children were sampled from registered births in the National Center for Health Statistics vital statistics system. Births were selected within primary sampling units and, in some cases, secondary sampling units. This sampling approach was chosen because of its cost effectiveness and because it provided better sample coverage compared to other methods such as sampling hospitals or birth certificates. Researchers followed sampled children through kindergarten entry. The sample was representative of diverse racial/ethnic groups and socioeconomic backgrounds.


Data collection took place when children were 9 months old, two years old, four years old and in kindergarten. Data were collected using a mixed-mode design including in-person interviews with the child’s primary caregiver (usually the mother), a self-administered questionnaire for the child’s father, a child assessment of developmental skills, and telephone interviews with child care providers and kindergarten teachers.


PERIODICITY


The ECLS-B is a longitudinal study following the same children from birth through kindergarten entry. Full-scale collection for 9 month old children occurred in 2001 and 2002, with the first follow-up of 2-year old children occurring in 2003 and 2004, and the second follow-up of 4-year-old children occurring in 2005 and 2006. In the third follow-up during the fall of 2006, data were collected from all participating sample children, approximately 75 percent of whom were in kindergarten or higher. In the fall of 2007, data were collected from the remaining 25 percent of participating sample children who had not yet entered kindergarten or higher in the previous collection, as well as children who were repeating kindergarten in the 2007-08 school year. The collection of data for children in kindergarten occurred over a two-year period because of the age requirements for school entry. NCES has released data for subsequent waves approximately one year after data collection ends. Data collection beyond the kindergarten year has not been scheduled at this time.


CONTENT


The ECLS-B was designed to describe the earliest experiences and relationships in children's lives. The study provides descriptive data on 1) children's health status at birth and at regular intervals during early childhood; 2) children's growth and development in critical domains; 3) children's transitions to child care and early childhood education programs and kindergarten; 4) father involvement; and 5) school readiness. The longitudinal nature of the study enables researchers to study children's physical, cognitive, language, social and emotional development and to relate children's growth and development to their early learning environment, while the sample design will allow researchers to examine differences among the children by race/ethnicity, economics, and family composition.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The ECPP survey provide data on a nationally representative sample of children from birth to those age 6 who have not yet entered kindergarten. In contrast, ECLS-B focuses only on one cohort of children born in 2001. Further, ECLS-B does not meet the NHES goal of measuring change over time with cross-sectional samples of the population of interest.


AVAILABILITY


The first three waves of data collection have been released. The restricted-use CD-ROM contains an electronic codebook, a restricted-use datafile, and survey documentation for the first three waves of data collection. The CD-ROM and instructions for obtaining a restricted-use data license are available on the ECLS-B web page.


For more information on the ECLS-B, contact the ECLS-B staff at:


[email protected]


The web site for ECLS-B is:


http://nces.ed.gov/ecls/Birth.asp


For information on this survey, contact


Gail Mulligan

National Center for Education Statistics

1990 K Street, NW

Room 9086

Washington, DC 20006


(202) 502-7491

Email: [email protected]

TITLE


The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort


PURPOSE


The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort (ECLS-K) has two purposes: descriptive and analytic. It provides descriptive data on a national basis of children’s status at entry into school, their transition into school, and their progression through eighth grade. This data set enables researchers to study how a wide range of family, school, community, and individual variables affect early success in school.


SPONSORSHIP


ECLS-K is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.


DESIGN


A nationally representative sample of approximately 22,000 children enrolled in about 1,000 kindergarten programs during the 1998-99 school year was selected for participation in the study. ECLS-K used a multi-stage sampling method. The primary sampling units were geographic areas (i.e., a group of counties) and the second-stage units were schools that were selected based on the 1995-96 CCD Public School Universe File. The sample is designed to allow users to produce separate national estimates of public and private school kindergartners; black, Hispanic, white, and Asian children; and children by socioeconomic status. Data were collected from the individual child, the child’s parents/guardians, teachers, and school using mixed-modes. Measures of a child’s cognitive skills are obtained through a one-on-one assessment of the child, conducted at the child’s school. Additional information was collected from telephone interviews conducted with the parent each time children were assessed. If a parent did not have a telephone, an in-person interview was conducted. Teachers completed self-administered questionnaires each time children were assessed (with the exception of the fall of first grade). School administrators, principals, and headmasters were asked to complete self-administered questionnaires during each of the spring data collections.


PERIODICITY


Data on the kindergarten cohort were collected twice during the base year of the study-- once during the beginning and once near the end of the school year. In the fall of the 1999-2000 school year, when most of the cohort moved to the first grade, data were collected from a 30 percent subsample of the cohort. In the spring of first grade, data were once again collected from the entire sample of children as well as their parents, teachers, and school administrators. In 2002 (third grade year), 2004 (fifth grade year), and 2007 (eighth grade year) child assessments were conducted and parent, teacher and school administrators completed interviews in the spring.


CONTENT


The child assessment largely focuses on the child’s physical and psychomotor development, social and emotional development, and cognitive development in reading, arithmetic, and general knowledge. Data on the characteristic of the children, their families, their schools, kindergarten programs, and classrooms are also collected to examine the status of children at entry into kindergarten, the expectations of schools about what skills, behaviors and attributes are necessary, and how children fare in the new environment. The study also examines the roles that parents and families play in preparing for and supporting their children’s education and how families, schools, and communities interact to support children’s education. In particular, the Parental Involvement section includes a series of questions about the types of school activities parents attend, and barriers to participating in such activities as well as school choice.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The ECLS-K contains many items from prior NHES parent interviews that will likely be a part of the upcoming ECPP. Both studies are interested in examining the role of the home environment and parent involvement in children’s outcomes. The sample for the ECLS-K consists of a single cohort of children in kindergarten through the fifth grade, whereas the ECPP survey focuses on younger children, those from birth to age 6 who have not yet entered kindergarten. The ECPP will also provide information on the home environment of children who are home-schooled (ECLS-K obtains information about home-schooled children only if they were in a study school at the time of initial data collection).


AVAILABILITY


Data and documentation for the kindergarten, first grade, third grade, and fifth grade years, as well as three longitudinal data files (kindergarten through first grade, kindergarten through third grade, and kindergarten through fifth grade) are available via CD-ROM from the National Center for Education Statistics.


The web site for ECLS-K is:


http://nces.ed.gov/ecls/Kindergarten.asp


For more information on this survey, contact


Chris Chapman

National Center for Education Statistics

1990 K Street, NW

Room 9042

Washington, DC 20006


(202) 502-7414


Email: [email protected]


TITLE


The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort of 2010-11 (ECLS-K:11)


PURPOSE


The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort of 2011-11 (ECLS-K:11) will provide data on a national basis of children’s status at entry into school, their transition into school, and their progression through fifth grade. This data set will enable researchers to study how a wide range of family, school, community, and individual variables affect early success in school.


SPONSORSHIP


ECLS-K:11 is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.


DESIGN


The ECLS-K:11 will survey a nationally representative sample of children attending both full-day and part-day kindergarten in either public or private schools in 2010-2011. Children's parents, teachers, schools and providers will also provide information on children's cognitive, social, emotional, and physical development.

Trained field staff will conduct direct assessment of children in their schools and telephone interviews with their parents. Teachers and school administrators will be contacted and asked to complete questionnaires. Before- and after-school care providers will also be interviewed.


PERIODICITY


Data collections are currently planned to occur in the fall and the spring of kindergarten (2010-2011), the spring of 1st grade (2012), the spring of 2nd grade (2013), the spring of 3rd grade (2014), the spring of 4th grade (2015), and the spring of 5th grade (2016). Prior to the base year collection of the ECLS-K:11, a field test will be conducted with children and their teachers for the development of new survey items.


CONTENT


In addition to data on children's cognitive, social, emotional, and physical development, the study will also include information on children's home environment, home educational activities, school environment, classroom environment, classroom curriculum, teacher qualifications, and before- and after-school care.


The ECLS-K:11 will differ from the previous ECLS studies in that it provides data relevant to emerging policy-related issues such as No Child Left Behind legislation, increasing school choice, and a rise in English language learners. ECLS-K:11 together with the original ECLS-K will allow comparisons between two cohorts experiencing different political, educational, social and demographic environments.



LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The ECLS-K:11 Parent Interview will contain some items on child care that will likely be a part of the ECPP interview. The studies share an interest in children’s developmental status at school entry and early school experiences and their home activities with parents.

In particular, the field testing of newly developed questions that can provide information on more recent educational issues such as school choice may provide useful information for the NHES:11.


However, while the ECPP survey will provide trend data for nationally representative samples of children from birth to age 6 who have not yet entered kindergarten, the ECLS-K:11 is limited to a single cohort of children who will be kindergartners in 2010-2011.


AVAILABILITY


Data and reports are not yet available..


The web site for ECLS-K:11 is:


http://nces.ed.gov/ecls/kindergarten2010.asphttp://nces.ed.gov/ecls/Kindergarten.asp


For general information on this survey, contact


Chris Chapman

National Center for Education Statistics

1990 K Street, NW

Room 9042

Washington, DC 20006


(202) 502-7414


Email: [email protected]


Or,

Gail M. Mulligan

Project Officer, ECLS-K:11

National Center for Education Statistics

1990 K Street, NW

Room 9086

Washington, DC 20006

(202) 502-7491


Email: [email protected]

TITLE


The Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study


PURPOSE


The Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study addresses three areas: nonmarital childbearing, welfare reform and the role of fathers. The purpose of the study is to offer information on these areas to policy makers and community leaders.


SPONSORSHIP


Funding for the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study come from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) and from a consortium of national and local foundations. The study is conducted by the Center for Research on Child Wellbeing, Princeton University.


DESIGN


The data are being collected in 20 U.S. cities, including among others, Austin, Pittsburgh, Boston, Baltimore, Chicago and San Jose. The cities were selected using a stratified random sample of all U.S. cities with a population of 200,000 or more. Total sample size is 4,700 families, including 3,600 unmarried couples and 1,100 married couples. Data is representative of nonmarital births in each of the 20 cities, and also representative of all nonmarital births in U.S. cities with populations over 200,000. Three follow-up interviews were conducted with both parents at the time the child was one, three and five years old. Data on child health and development was collected from the parents during each of the follow-up interviews, and in-home assessments of child wellbeing were carried out at 30 and 48 months. Child wellbeing measures overlap with those used in other national studies, including the Infant Health and Development Program, the Early Head Start Evaluation, the Teenage Parent Demonstration Project, and the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study - Birth Cohort Study 2000 (ECLS-B). This study collected its data using a mixed-mode approach, as detailed below.


PERIODICITY

Baseline interviews were conducted in-person between February, 1998 and September, 2000 and consisted of 4,898 completed mother interviews and 3,830 completed father interviews. One-year telephone follow-up interviews were conducted between June, 1999 and March, 2002 with 4,365 completed mother interviews and 3,367 completed father interviews. Three-year telephone follow-up interviews were conducted between April 2001 and December 2003. Five-year telephone follow-up interviews were conducted between July 2003 and February 2006. A nine-year telephone follow-up interview is being conducted from 2007 to 2009.


CONTENT


The baseline questionnaires for mothers and fathers include sections on prenatal care, mother-father relationships, expectations about fathers' rights and responsibilities, attitudes toward marriage, parents' health, social support and extended kin, knowledge about local policies and community resources, and education, employment, and income. Follow-up interviews gather additional information on access to and use of healthcare and child care services, experiences with local welfare and child support agencies, and parental conflict and domestic violence.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The survey is designed to target unmarried parents, a much narrower scope than the ECPP sample. Although the survey does include some questions relative to child care, it was not directly designed to measure this study topic.


AVAILABILITY


The first four waves of data are available from the website below.


For more information on the Fragile Families and Child wellbeing study, contact:


Sara McLanahan, Ph.D.
Center for Research on Child Wellbeing
Princeton University
265 Wallace Hall
Princeton, NJ 08544


(609) 258-4875


Email: [email protected]


A summary including detailed information on the survey can be viewed at:


http://www.fragilefamilies.princeton.edu/

TITLE


Head Start Family and Child Experiences Survey

PURPOSE


Head Start Family and Child Experiences Survey (FACES) is a national longitudinal study of the cognitive, social, emotional, and physical development of Head Start children; the characteristics, well-being, and accomplishments of families; the observed quality of Head Start classrooms; and the characteristics, needs and opinions of Head Start teachers.


SPONSORSHIP


The FACES study is currently conducted by Mathematica Policy Research for the Commissioner’s Office of Research and Evaluation in the Administration on Children, Youth, and Families, DHHS.


DESIGN


The original cohort of FACES (1997) had six phases of data collection using personal interviews and in-person child assessments. FACES uses a multistage sample selection of (1) programs, (2) centers, (3) classrooms, and (4) children. The sampling frame of Head Start programs was created based on the Head Start Program Information Report (PIR). The first phase involved a spring 1997 field test in which approximately 2,400 children and parents were studied in a nationally stratified random sample of 40 Head Start programs. The second and third phases of FACES occurred in fall 1997 (Wave One) and spring 1998 (Wave Two) when data were collected on a sample of 3,200 children and families in the same 40 Head Start programs. Spring 1998 data collection included assessments of both Head Start children completing the program and Head Start graduates completing kindergarten (kindergarten field test), as well as interviews with their parents and ratings by their kindergarten teachers. The fourth phase occurred in spring 1999 with data collection in the 40 Head Start programs, plus a kindergarten follow-up for children who completed Head Start in spring 1998. The fifth phase in spring 2000 completed the kindergarten follow-up for the children completing Head Start in spring 1999 and first graders who completed Head Start in 1998. The sixth phase in spring 2001 completed the first grade follow-up for the children who completed Head Start in spring 1999. An additional feature of FACES 1997 was the validation sub-study or embedded case study of a longitudinal sample of 120 randomly selected families from the larger FACES sample (three families from each of the 40 FACES sites were selected).


Four cohorts of FACES have been fielded to date – FACES 1997, 2000, 2003 and 2006. Each cohort has included a nationally representative sample of Head Start children and their families. The subsequent cohorts have followed a similar study design.


PERIODICITY


The study was launched in 1997, as described above. A new national cohort of FACES was launched in fall 2000, with a sample of 2,800 children entering Head Start and their families in 43 new Head Start programs. The 2000 study involved data collection in the fall and spring of the Head Start year, spring of the second Head Start year (for children who spent two years in Head Start), and spring of children’s kindergarten year. The data also includes information on their kindergarten enrollment in Spring 2002 and Spring 2003. The third FACES cohort was launched in Fall 2003 with a sample of 2,400 children entering Head Start and their families in 63 new Head Start programs. The 2003 study involved data collection in the fall and spring of the Head Start year, spring of the second Head Start year (for children who spent two years in Head Start), and spring of children’s kindergarten year. The fourth FACES cohort was launched in Fall 2006 with a nationally representative sample of children entering Head Start and their families in 60 new Head Start programs. The 2006 study is ongoing, and involves four rounds of data collection—fall and spring of children’s first Head Start year, spring of the second Head Start year for children who were 3 years old at the time the sample was selected, and spring of children’s kindergarten year.


CONTENT


The study’s main data components consist of three chronological parent interviews: the Head Start parent interview, the Kindergarten parent interview, and the first grade parent interview. Each interview collects information on the family’s demographics, including employment and income, and home and neighborhood characteristics. The interviews also collect information regarding the child’s behavior and activities, caregiver, and disabilities. Other topics include: parent’s feelings and satisfaction level with Head Start, home safety, family health care, and community services. The first grade parent interview was excluded from the FACES 2000 and FACES 2003 surveys.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The FACES population includes cohorts of preschool children enrolled in Head Start programs. It collects limited data on whether the child attended center-based care prior to enrolling in Head Start, but does not ask about relative or non-relative care.


AVAILABILITY


For more information on the FACES study, contact:


Maria Woolverton

Office of Planning Research and Evaluation

Administration for Children and Families

Division of Child and Family Development

370 L’Enfant Promenade SW

7th Floor West

Aerospace Building

Washington, DC 20201


(202) 205-4039


Email: [email protected]


The FACES datasets and reports are archived by Research Connections, a web-based clearinghouse that offers a collection of more than 10,000 resources from the many disciplines related to child care and early education.


Its website is http://www.researchconnections.org.


The FACES instruments can be obtained from:


http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/opre/hs/faces/index.html



TITLE


National Child Care Survey 1990: Parent Study


PURPOSE


The National Child Care Survey was designed to provide a nationally representative portrait of all aspects of child care, including who provides care, how parents select nonparental care and how much they pay for it, how parents feel about their options for child care, and what child care arrangements were previously used by the parents.


SPONSORSHIP


The National Child Care Survey was a public-private partnership, jointly sponsored by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) and the Head Start Bureau of the Administration for Children, Youth and Families (ACYF), Office of Human Development Services, Department of Health and Human Services.


DESIGN


The National Child Care Survey is a nationally representative study of 4,392 parents with one or more children under the age of 13. Households with children under the age of 13 were recruited by random-digit-dial computer-aided telephone interviewing.


PERIODICITY


The National Child Care Survey: Parent Study was conducted once in late 1989 and early 1990.


CONTENT


The National Child Care Survey Parent Study focused on the use of child care arrangements, how child care affects parental employment patterns, how parents make decisions about child care, and the characteristics of the settings in which child care is provided. The survey included a schedule of when the respondent and his or her spouse or partner was at work and a schedule of when each child was at each care arrangement in order to provide a detailed picture of the correspondence between child care arrangements and work. Extensive data on employment history were also gathered, including the relationship between work and child care in the past.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


This study is directly related to the goals of the ECPP because it includes questions to parents about difficulty in finding child care, whether the availability of child care affected their ability to work, and detailed information about where the child was cared for while his or her parent(s) were at work. However, since it was administered once, it cannot produce estimates to track change over time.





AVAILABILITY


The dataset as well as supporting documents are available from:


American Family Data Archive

Sociometrics Corporation

170 State Street, Suite 260

Los Altos, California 94022-2812

(415) 949-3282


TITLE


National Evaluation of Welfare-to-Work Strategies (NEWWS) – Child Outcomes Study


PURPOSE


The NEWWS evaluation is a study of the effectiveness of seven mandatory welfare-to-work programs in the states of Georgia, Ohio, Michigan, Oklahoma, Oregon and California. Sample members were followed for five years. A broad range of data was collected through surveys including data on educational attainment, family composition, housing status, wage progression, employment, child care, depression, and total family income.  In addition, effects on the well-being of the children of the mothers in the study was evaluated.  Four types of child outcomes were measured: cognitive development and academic achievement; safety and health; problem behavior and emotional well-being; and social development. The Child Outcomes Study was launched as a special substudy to assess whether and how the development of preschool-age children was affected over time when their mothers were assigned to a JOBS program.


SPONSORSHIP


The NEWWS evaluation was sponsored by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Child Outcomes Study was carried out by Child Trends under subcontract to Manpower Demonstration Research Corporation.


DESIGN


NEWWS used a random-assignment experiment, where at each evaluation site, individuals required to participate in the program were assigned to either a program group (with access to employment and training services) or a control group (who received no services but could seek them out on their own).


In three of the sites (Georgia, Michigan, and California), a Child Outcomes Study was embedded within the larger evaluation so that families in the Child Outcomes Study completed the full evaluation. To be eligible for the Child Outcomes Study, a family had to have a child between the ages of three and five years at the time of enrollment, and single fathers were excluded. There were 5,905 families eligible for the Child Outcomes Study, however 3,194 completed the two-year follow-up. The two-year follow-up was conducted via in-person interviews at the family’s home, with families either being contacted on the telephone or having an interviewer go directly to the house.


PERIODICITY


The NEWWS evaluation was conducted in a two-year period at each study site, between the years 1991 and 1994.


CONTENT


The Child Outcomes Study includes measures on the history of child care arrangements for the focal child, what types of nonparental care the focal child has attended, whether the child has attended child care since the time the parent was enrolled in the evaluation, the number of teachers/providers the child has had in the program they attended, the age at which the child first started attending nonparental care, and the number of house per week that the child attended nonparental care.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The primary purpose of NHES and the ECPP is to conduct repeated measurements of the same phenomena at different points in time, this survey tracks nonparental care usage at one point in time. Additionally, the sample design is not nationally representative as is NHES and the ECPP.


AVAILABILITY


Information about the NEWSS study, including reports, datafiles, and codebooks are available from:


http://aspe.hhs.gov/hsp/NEWWS/


To obtain a printed copy of a report, contact the following:


Human Services Policy, Room 404E
Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
200 Independence Ave, SW
Washington, DC 20201
Fax:  (202) 690-6562

TITLE


The National Household Education Surveys Program, Early Childhood Program Participation Survey 2005


PURPOSE


The National Household Education Surveys Program (NHES) is a data collection system that is designed to address a wide range of education-related issues. It provides descriptive data on the educational activities of the U.S. population and offers policymakers, researchers, and educators a variety of statistics on the condition of education in the U.S. The ECPP component focused on children's participation in formal and informal nonparental care and education programs as well as characteristics of care arrangements for children from birth to age 6 who have not yet entered kindergarten.


SPONSORSHIP


The National Center for Education Statistics sponsors the project, which is conducted by Westat.


DESIGN


NHES is a program of telephone surveys of the non-institutionalized civilian population of the United States. Households are selected for the survey using random digit dialing (RDD) methods. Each collection of NHES begins with a screening of a representative sample of households. In 2005, 7,209 interviews were conducted for the ECPP Survey. Data are collected using computer-assisted telephone interviewing (CATI) procedures.


One of the goals of NHES is to produce reliable estimates of the characteristics of children's and adults' educational experiences for the total targeted population and for domains defined by race and ethnicity. Estimates by race and ethnicity are of great interest, especially for monitoring educational trends over time. Therefore, the NHES sample design over-samples minorities in order to increase the reliability of estimates for these groups.


PERIODICITY


NHES has been conducted in the springs of 1991, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2005 and 2007. The ECPP survey was initially conducted in 1991, and has been repeated in 1995, 2001, and 2005. A subset of questions was also asked in 1999. NHES will be conducted again in 2011 and periodically thereafter.


CONTENT


In the 2005 ECPP survey, parents of children from birth to age 6 who had not enrolled in kindergarten completed interviews about whether the child attended or was enrolled in non-parental care such as relative care, nonrelative care, child care centers, and Head Start or Early Head Start. The interviews also included questions about how parents selected care, whether they had difficulty finding care, home activities with family members, and emerging literacy and numeracy.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The primary purpose of NHES is to conduct repeated measurements of the same phenomena at different points in time, and as such, additional administrations of the ECPP are needed to track changes over time.


AVAILABILITY


NHES data sets are available online at http://nces.ed.gov/nhes/dataproducts.asp as well as on CD-ROM from:


Christopher Chapman

NCES

Room 9086

1990 K Street, NW

Washington, DC 20206-5456


(202) 502-7414


Additional information on the NHES Program is available at:


http://nces.ed.gov/nhes


For more information on NHES, contact the NHES staff at:


[email protected]


TITLE


National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development


PURPOSE


The purpose of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development (SECC) is to examine how variations in child care relate to children’s development. The study also seeks to determine how differences in child care and family environment relate to children’s social, emotional, intellectual, and language development, and to their physical growth and health.


SPONSORSHIP


The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development sponsors the study.


DESIGN


The Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development is a longitudinal research project involving 10 study sites across the United States. The study focuses on the experiences of 1,364 children, recruited at birth in 1991 from hospitals at the 10 data collection sites. The study was conducted in four phases. Phase I followed children from birth until age 3; Phase II followed 1,095 4 ½ year olds into the first grade; Phase III followed 1,073 children through the fifth and sixth grades and Phase IV followed the children through the seventh, eighth, and ninth grades (the exact number is still being determined).


The study employed a mixed mode data collection approach. Phase 1 data collection included videotaped behavioral observations of the sampled children at their homes, child care settings, visits to project research laboratories and child care center directors' telephone interviews/mailed questionnaire. In-person interviews were also obtained from parents and caregiver to gain additional information about the children. As the children moved into school age, data from Phases II and III were also gathered from teachers and visits by researchers to the classroom. Children’s physical activity was monitored directly at third, fifth and sixth grades.


PERIODICITY


The longitudinal study began in 1991 and the first phase was completed in 1994. The second phase began in 1995, just before most of the children began kindergarten, and was completed in 1999 when all the children finished the first grade. The third phase began in 2000 when the children were in second grade and ended in 2006 when all the children finished sixth grade. The fourth phase began in 2005 when the children were in seventh grade and was completed in 2007 when the children finished ninth grade.


CONTENT


The primary domains of child development that the SECC is studying include social, emotional, intellectual, behavioral, and physical development. Although the study primarily focuses on early child care, the influence of the family on children's development is also an important component of the study. Family characteristics measured in the study included the family’s economic situation, family structure (single parent vs. partnered parent), the mother’s education, her child rearing attitudes, the quality of mother-child interaction, and the extent to which the home environment contributed to the optimal development of children. These family characteristics were used to examine the role of the family in the child’s entry into child care, the quality of that care, and the number of care arrangements. A second area of the study delves into the association between child care and the mother-child relationship. A third component looks at the characteristics of child care and how it relates to the children’s cognitive and language development, as well as their behavior and self-control in the first 3 years. Later phases of the study allowed researchers to examine whether any of the effects of preschool child care continue into middle childhood. The third phase of the study allowed researchers to examine the effect of family characteristics and the home environment on children's outcomes in middle childhood and the fourth phase of the study allowed researchers to examine those effects on children’s outcomes in early adolescence.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The study is directly related to the goals of the ECPP component and contains related items. However, the sample for the study is based on ten study sites, and therefore, it does not provide a nationally representative sample of U. S. children, as does NHES. Issues regarding disabled children, which are covered in NHES, are not explored in the SECC.


AVAILABILITY


For information on the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development, contact:


James A. Griffin, Ph.D. Deputy Branch Chief

NICHD Child Development and Behavior Branch

6100 Executive Blvd., Room 4B05D

Rockville, MD 20852

(301) 435-2307


Email: [email protected]


Study results, publications, and applications for the data from Phases I through III are available at the following website:


https://secc.rti.org/home.cfm


http://www.nichd.nih.gov/research/supported/seccyd.cfm



TITLE


The National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (Canada)


PURPOSE


The Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (NLSCY) is a long-term study conducted to monitor the development and well being of Canada’s children as they grow from infancy to adulthood. This study collects information about factors influencing a child’s social, emotional and behavioral development and to monitor the impact of these factors on a child’s development over time. The survey covers topics on the health of children, their physical development, learning and behavior and data on their social environment (family, friends, schools and community). The survey provides data for use in research on children’s development and their adjustment to school in Canada.


SPONSORSHIP


Human Resources and Social Development Canada and Statistics Canada conducted the survey in partnership.


DESIGN


The survey follows a representative sample of Canadian children, aged newborn to 11 years, into adulthood, with data collection occurring at 2-year intervals. The initial sample was approximately 22,500 children, which was drawn from the Canadian Labor Force Survey’s sample of respondent households. The data are collected from several sources including parents, teachers, principals, and the children themselves. Most interviews are conducted by an interviewer using computer-assisted interviewing (CAI).


The NLSCY consists of longitudinal samples and cross-sectional samples.


PERIODICITY


This is a longitudinal study consisting of several longitudinal and cross-sectional samples. Cross-sectional weights are provided when an age cohort can be considered to be representative of a cross-sectional population. The study began 1994 and is ongoing at 2-year intervals. There have been seven cycles of data collection, in 1994-95, 1996-97, 1998-99, 2000-01, 2002-03, 2004-05, and 2006-07.


CONTENT


The survey assesses the child, and family and community environment in which the child is living. Specific topics include family structure/demographics, family and custodial history, parent’s education, parenting styles, importance of good grades, school involvement, and expectations for the child. Child care and child care arrangements are also topics covered by the NLSCY.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The survey measures a child’s attendance at child care, as well as other topics planned for the 2011 ECPP survey such as emerging literacy and numeracy, home activities, and health. However, the survey is conducted on children of all ages, and is conducted in Canada and therefore is not representative of people living in the United States.


AVAILABILITY


Information about the survey, including instruments and data files, can be found at the following web site:


http://www.statcan.gc.ca/cgi-bin/imdb/p2SV.pl?Function=getSurvey&SDDS=4450&lang=en&db=imdb&adm=8&dis=2


For further information about the National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth contact:


Statistics Canada
100 Tunney's Pasture Driveway
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0T6


TITLE


National Study of Child Care of Low-Income Families – Community Survey


PURPOSE


The National Study of Child Care of Low-Income Families – Community Survey was the second of three components of the National Study of Child Care of Low-Income Families. The Community Survey was a one-time random-digit-dial telephone survey of poor and near-poor families with working parents in 25 communities in 17 states.


SPONSORSHIP


The study was conducted by Abt Associates and the National Center for Children in Poverty at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health in New York City for the Administration for Children and Families in the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.


DESIGN


Starting with the sample of 100 counties/county groupings used by the 1990 National Child Care Survey, 80 were identified with a 1993 poverty rate for children greater than 13.8 percent. When properly weighted, these 80 counties/county groups represent more than 90 percent of poor children in the United States. The sample of 25 counties, selected randomly with probability of selection proportional to size, is a representative sample of the 80 counties/county groupings.


For the community survey, families in each of the 25 communities were selected by a random-digit dial (RDD) telephone survey. A total of 2,500 families (100 in each community) with children under the age of 13 in a nonparental care arrangement participated in an in-person interview.


PERIODICITY


The community survey was conducted over a 12-month period, beginning in August 2000 and ending in July 2001.


CONTENT


The in-person interviews addressed questions relating to the type and number of nonparental care arrangements that low-income families use, what influences the choices that low-income families make about child care, the perception about availability of different kinds of child care, the proportion of family income spent on nonparental child care, and how the presence or absence of a child care subsidy affects parents’ child care decisions.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


This study is directly related to the goals of the ECPP because it includes questions to parents about barriers to child care, whether the availability of child care affected their ability to work, and detailed information about the history of child care arrangements for the focal child. However, the survey is not nationally representative, and is limited to low-income populations.


AVAILABILITY


Information about the survey, including instruments and reports, can be found at the following web site:


http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/opre/cc/nsc_low_income/index.html


For further information about the National Study of Child Care of Low-Income Families, contact:


Seth Chamberlain

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

Administration for Children and Families

370 L’Enfant Promenade

7th Floor West

Washington, DC 20447

(202) 260-2242


Email: [email protected]

TITLE


The National Survey of America’s Families


PURPOSE


The National Survey of America’s Families (NSAF) is a survey of the economic, health, and social characteristics of children, adults under the age of 65, and their families. The survey pays particular attention to low-income families, reporting on important aspects about their lives and how they differ from the lives of children and adults in families with higher incomes.


SPONSORSHIP


The study was conducted by the Urban Institute and Child Trends, and sponsored by a number of private foundations. Westat conducted sampling and data collection for the study.


DESIGN


Sampling was done in a dual-frame design, with the main frame consisting of a random-digit-dial telephone survey, and the supplemental frame of nontelephone households. The survey was conducted in three rounds. In round 1, in 1997, interviews were conducted with 75,437 adults and about 34,439 children in 44,461 households. In round 2, in 1999, interviews were obtained for over 73,000 adults and almost 36,000 children in more than 42,000 households. In round three, in 2002, interviews were conducted for over 70,577 adults and 34,332 children in over 43,000 households. Oversize samples were drawn in 13 states. The sample was representative of the civilian, noninstitutionalized population under age 65. A short screener interview was used to identify and sample households on the basis of age composition and household income. After the screener interview, telephone interviews were conducted using computer-assisted telephone interviewing (CATI). Interviews with respondents in nontelephone households were conducted using a cellular phone that was provided to them by the survey administrator to minimize the potential for mode effects,


PERIODICITY


Cross-sectional data were obtained in three rounds: February to November 1997, February to October 1999 and from February to October, 2002.


CONTENT


The survey contained several well-being measures having to do with economic security, health and health care, child’s education and cognitive and social development, child’s behavioral problems, and family and community environment. The survey was divided into the following topic areas: student status, parent/child/family interaction and education, household roster, child care, nonresidential parent/father, employment and earning, family income, welfare program participation, education and training, housing and economic hardship, and race and ethnicity.



LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


Although the 2002 survey does include new questions related to child care, it was not directly designed to measure this study topic. No future cycles are planned, so NSAF does not meet the NHES goal of measuring change over time.


AVAILABILITY


Current data are available and can be downloaded online:


http://www.urban.org/center/anf/nsaf.cfm


For more information, contact:


Tim Triplett

Survey Associate

Assessing the New Federalism

National Survey of America's Families

The Urban Institute

2100 M Street

Washington, DC 20037


202-261-5579


Email: [email protected]



TITLE


The National Survey of Children’s Health


PURPOSE


The National Survey of Children’s Health (NSCH) is a national telephone survey conducted every 4 years. It asks parents about a broad range of questions on children’s health and well-being, and is designed to allow for cross-state comparisons as well as national comparisons. It was first administered in 2003-2004 and the second administration was in 2007.


SPONSORSHIP


The study is funded by the Maternal Child Health Bureau of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Sampling and telephone interviews were conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics.


DESIGN


The NSCH is a random-digit-dial telephone survey. Telephone numbers are randomly called to identify households which had children under the age of 18. A screener is administered and a child is selected at random among eligible children to be the focal child. A total of 102,353 surveys were completed for children ages 0 to 17 in 2003-04; each of the 50 states had between 1,483 and 2,241 completed surveys. Final sample size for 2007 has not yet been released, however it is expected that the sample size will be slightly lower than that of the 2003 survey.


PERIODICITY


The survey is scheduled to be repeated every four years.


CONTENT


The survey contains measures on children’s physical and mental health, health insurance status and type of coverage, access and use of health care, whether the child has a personal doctor or “medical home”, attendance at various types of nonparental care, hours per week spent in nonparental care (2003 only), parental reports on child development, difficulty finding child care, family health and activities, and child and family demographics.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The survey is a nationally representative sample of children and includes questions related to the ECPP. It is also scheduled to repeat every four years so there is the ability to monitor change over time. However, the NSCH does not collect detail on child care arrangements, parental choice in child care, parental employment, or data on emerging literacy and numeracy as is collected in the ECPP.




AVAILABILITY


Current data are available and can be downloaded online:


http://www.nschdata.org


For more information, contact:


CAHMI – the Child and Adolescent Health Measurement Initiative
Oregon Health & Science University
Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine
707 SW Gaines Road, Mail Code CDRCP
Portland, OR 97239-2998


(503) 494-1930


Email: [email protected]


TITLE


National Survey of Families and Households


PURPOSE


The National Survey of Families and Households (NSFH) investigated the causes and consequences of the major changes in U.S. patterns of fertility, marriage, mortality, migration, family composition, and household structure that have occurred over the past several decades.


SPONSORSHIP


The Social and Behavioral Sciences Branch, Center for Population Research, of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development funded this survey. Staff at the Center for Demography and Ecology of the University of Wisconsin-Madison designed the survey and analyzed the information. Data were collected by The Institute for Survey Research at Temple University and the University of Wisconsin Survey Center.


DESIGN


The NSFH was conducted in three waves. A baseline wave (Wave 1) was conducted in 1987-88, a follow-up (Wave 2) was conducted in 1992-94 and another follow-up (Wave 3) was conducted from 2001-2003. The target population consisted of people age 19 and older, who were living in households, and who could be interviewed in either English or Spanish at the time of the baseline interview. The main sample was a national probability sample of 17,000 households from 100 sampling areas in the United States.


The sample size for Wave 1 was approximately 13,000 households. The overall sample included a core cross-section of households plus an oversampling of blacks, Puerto Ricans, Mexican Americans, single-parent families, families with stepchildren, cohabiting couples, and recently married couples. One adult per household was randomly selected as the primary respondent. Data were collected through personal interviews and self-administered forms. Spouses and cohabiting partners of primary respondents were given shorter self-administered questionnaires.


In Wave 1, some information was obtained about each of the children in the household, and additional information was obtained about a selected "focal child." The focal child was chosen by listing the first names of all children in the household, and selecting the child whose name came first alphabetically.


For Wave 2, about 10,000 surviving members of the original sample were interviewed in person. The following other interview components were also included for Wave 2: a personal interview with the current spouse or cohabiting partner of the primary respondent; a personal interview with the original spouse or partner of the primary respondent in cases where the relationship has ended; a telephone interview with the “focal children” who were age 13-18 in Wave 1 and age 18-23 for Wave 2; a short telephone interview with “focal children” who were age 5-12 in Wave 1 and age 10-17 in Wave 2; short proxy interviews with a surviving spouse or other relative in cases where the original respondent had died or was too ill to interview; and a telephone interview with a randomly selected parent of a main respondent.


During Wave 3, 10,069 telephone interviews were conducted with a subset of Wave 1 respondents. The instrument included the following components: a mid-to-later life sample of main respondents 45 and older with no “focal” children and a parent sample of young adult focal children and Wave 1 spouses or partners were interviewed. Proxy interviews were given to the spouse or partner if the main respondent was too ill to be interviewed.


PERIODICITY


Data collection took place in three waves. The first wave was from 1987-88, the second wave was from 1992-94 and the third wave was from 2001-2003.


CONTENT


The questions included on this survey cover a very broad range of family-related topics. Those of relevance to NHES in Wave 1 included questions about children’s school attendance; grade repetition, behavior problems requiring a meeting, school suspension or expulsion; and emotional problems. Questions about children age 4 and younger included nursery and preschool participation, hours spent at programs, and how frequently the parent reads to the child. If the respondent was employed, there were questions about child care arrangements during working hours. For children age 5 through 11, parents were asked to assess their children's class ranking relative to other classmates and to state educational expectations for their children.


In Wave 2, primary respondents were asked several questions about their children. For children age 5 to 17, respondents were asked about their children repeating grades in school, children’s behavior problems, educational expectations, and activities with their children, and involvement in the child’s school. For children under age 5, respondents were asked about long-lasting physical conditions, mental or emotional problems, readiness for kindergarten, behavior problems, television watching, and preschool participation. There were also questions regarding nonresident parents’ contact with children.


In Wave 2, youth age 10 to 17 were also interviewed about several topics including having been a victim of stealing or having been threatened; fighting; grades in school; participation in school and community activities; expected educational attainment; cigarette, alcohol, and marijuana use; and contact with absent parents. Young adults age 18 to 23 were also interviewed about some educational issues, including receipt of high school diploma, expected educational attainment, postsecondary education, and degrees and certificates earned.


In Wave 3 the content of the main respondent/spouse interview was similar to Wave 2. In Wave 3, the focal children ranged in age from 18 to 34.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


Because this survey is based on a cohort of respondents in 1987-1988, the data are not appropriate for monitoring changes in educational issues over time among cross-sections of U.S. children and adults. Also, the substantive focus is not early childhood. Thus, the range of data available in ECPP is not fully represented in the NSFH.


AVAILABILITY


The public use data tapes and associated documentation for all three waves are available. These can be accessed by FTP and the World Wide Web for no charge. Assistance with the data may be obtained by contacting:


National Survey of Families and Households

Center for Demography

University of Wisconsin

1180 Observation Drive, Room 4412

Madison, WI 53706-1393


Phone: (608) 262-1537

Fax: (608) 262-8400


Email: [email protected]


For additional information about the survey online:


http://www.ssc.wisc.edu/nsfh/home.htm


TITLE


Panel Survey of Income Dynamics, Child Development Supplement


PURPOSE


The purpose of the Panel Survey of Income Dynamics (PSID) is to gather data on a broad variety on the dynamic aspects of economic and demographic behavior and social issues. The Child Development Supplement is meant to provide researchers with a comprehensive, nationally representative, and longitudinal data base of children and their families.


SPONSORSHIP


Major funding for the Panel Study of Income Dynamics comes from the National Science Foundation. Additional support comes from the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Labor, the National Institute on Aging, the Office of Economic Opportunity, and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development. Funding for the Child Development Supplement is primarily from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) and its additional funds are provided by the William T. Grant Foundation, the Annie E. Casey Foundation, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the U.S. Department of Education.


DESIGN


The original Panel Study of Income Dynamics sample consisted of two independent samples. The first an equal probability cross-sectional national sample of 3,000 drawn by the University of Michigan’s Survey Research Center, and the second is a sample of 2,000 low-income families drawn from the Survey of Economic Opportunity conducted by the Census Bureau. I think we need to state when this began.


This longitudinal study re-interviews the same individuals each year, following them through their life cycle. The study includes new family members as the individuals marry and have children. The survey collects data on all household members, but focuses primarily on the heads of household. The sample has grown to include information on 50,000 individuals spanning as much as 28 years of their lives. In 1997, the Child Development Supplement collected data on 0-12 year old children from a variety of sources, including parents, teachers, and the children themselves. There are approximately 2,500 families who participated in the research, and participants who are selected have been involved in at least one panel of Income Dynamics study. In 2002-2003, families were re-contacted if they had participated in the first Child Development Supplement and were in a PSID panel in 2001. The PSID was originally collected in face-to-face interviews using paper questionnaires. It then moved to computer assisted telephone interviewing in 1993.


PERIODICITY


The Panel Study of Income Dynamics has been conducted every year, since 1968. The first wave of the Child Development Supplement was fielded in 1997, the second wave occurred in 2002 and 2003, and a third wave occurred in 2007.



CONTENT


The focus of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics is on economic and demographic information, including items such as income sources and amounts, employment, family composition changes, and demographic events. The Child Development Supplement serves to enhance the PSID by obtaining detailed data on items not generally included in the main database. The data supports studies of ways in which time, money, parenting and teaching styles, divorce, unemployment, etc. influence and affect children’s development cognitively, emotionally, and physically, and how this is buffered by family, school, and community.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


Although there have been 31 data collections for the main database since 1968, the Child Development Supplement was first conducted in 1997. A second wave occurred between 2002 and 2003, and a third wave was conducted in 2007.


The substantive focus of the supplement is on school age children’s academic achievement and cognitive ability, social and emotional well being, and health. Thus, the study cannot provide information on topics covered by the ECPP, nor does it provide information on educational activities in the home.


AVAILABILITY


Current data is available and can be downloaded from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics web site at:


http://www.isr.umich.edu/src/psid


For information and inquires about the study, contact


PSID Staff

The Panel Study of Income Dynamics

Institute for Social Research

PO Box 1248

Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1248


Phone: (734) 763-5166

Fax: (734) 647-4575


Email: [email protected]

TITLE


Partnership Impact Research Project


PURPOSE


The Partnership Impact Research Project was a three-year study designed to assess the nature of early education partnerships among Head Start, pre-kindergarten (pre-k), child care, and early care and education programs and their influence on child care quality and access to services. During the longitudinal study, original data collection was used to learn about the accessibility of services for parents whose children attended a child care center.


SPONSORSHIP


Funding for the Partnership Impact Research Project was provided by the Child Care Bureau of the Administration for Children and Families of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The study was conducted by the Education Development Center.


DESIGN


Year one of the study focused on a qualitative analysis to explain partnership approaches at the state and local levels and involved two case studies, one at the state level and one at the provider level. In years two and three of the study, parents whose children attended the child care centers being studied were interviewed about their opinions regarding the quality of care their child received. A total of 1,691 parents responded to the survey. The sample was derived from a convenience sample selected to ensure a broad range of perspectives and to ensure methodological soundness. It used a mixed-mode approach combining mail questionnaires, telephone interviews, and face-to-face interviews.


PERIODICITY


The Partnership Impact Research Project was conducted once between 2001 to 2004.


CONTENT


The parent survey of the Partnership Impact Research Project included measures on parents’ views of the child care center their child attended. It provides information about the population being served through child care centers, including home/school connection, how a parent views the classroom and the care being provided by the center, and the services available to both the child and parent through the center.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


While the Partnership Impact Research Project includes measures relevant to the content of the ECPP, it is not nationally representative and does not include multiple data collection periods so that change over time can be measured.





AVAILABILITY


Current data is available and can be downloaded from the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research:


http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/cocoon/ICPSR/STUDY/04298.xml


For information and inquires about the study, contact


Diane Schilder

Senior Research Associate

Center for Children and Families

55 Chapel St.

Newton, MA 02458


Phone: (617) 969-7100


TITLE


Survey of Income and Program Participation– Child Care Topical Component


PURPOSE


The Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) is a multipanel longitudinal survey of adults, measuring their economic and demographic characteristics over a period of 2 1/2 years. The Child Care Topical Module of SIPP is designed to establish an ongoing database of child care statistics at the national level.


SPONSORSHIP


The topical module is funded and conducted by the U.S. Bureau of the Census. An Advisory Panel with representatives from selected Federal agencies oversees the questionnaire design and decides the frequency of interviewing.


DESIGN


The SIPP survey is based on a multistage stratified sample of the non-institutional resident population of the U.S. The survey universe includes persons living in households plus those persons living in group quarters such as dormitories and rooming houses. The first stage of sampling involves the definition of primary sampling units (PSUs), which are counties or groups of counties. Those with similar key socioeconomic characteristics are grouped together into strata and one sample PSU is selected from each stratum. The PSUs used for SIPP are a subsample of those used in the Current Population Survey (CPS). The second stage of sampling is the selection of households. To arrive at this sample, geographic units called "enumeration districts" (EDs), with an average of 350 housing units, are sampled from each PSU. Within each selected ED, two or four living quarters or “ultimate sampling units,” are systematically selected.


The topical module on child care is asked of respondents who are the designated parents or guardians of children under 15 who are living in the sampled household. In the first administration of the module (1984 panel, wave 5), the respondents (usually mothers) had to be employed outside the home. In subsequent panels, the respondents were either working or enrolled in school. Computer-assisted interviewing is used to collect the data. The questions asked of respondents in each panel pertain only to the three youngest children living in the household under 15 years of age. Child care data concerning approximately 5,400 children have been collected at each time of administration.


PERIODICITY


The first SIPP panel began in 1984 and a new panel has been introduced in February of each year. For each panel, the child care module has been administered in at least one wave of the survey. Each wave of interviewing is consecutive and lasts 4 months: Wave 1 begins in February and ends in May; Wave 2 begins in June and ends in September, etc. Each household in a panel is interviewed once each wave, so that each household is interviewed once every 4 months over a period of 3 years. The child care module was administered for each panel as follows: 1984 panel, wave 5; 1985 panel, wave 6; 1986 panel, waves 3 and 6; 1987 panel, waves 3 and 6; 1988 panel, waves 3 and 6; 1989 panel, wave 3; 1990 panel, wave 3; 1991 panel, wave 3; 1992 panel, waves 6 and 9; 1993 panel, waves 3 and 6; 1996 panel wave 4; 2001 panel, wave 4; and 2004 panel waves 4 and 8. The child care module is currently being designed for a future administration of SIPP.


CONTENT


The SIPP child care module obtains basic information on child care arrangements for children during the time when respondents are working or are in school. Questions specifically concern the month prior to the interview. For each of the three youngest children, the respondent is asked about the main type of arrangement used (that is, the one where the child was cared for during most of the hours that the respondent worked or was in class), when the child was usually cared for under the arrangement, and the number of hours per week the child usually spent in the arrangement. Information about the type and location of the second major type of arrangement is also gathered. Respondents are then asked about the total cost of child care arrangements in a typical week, and whether they have made any noncash payments. They are also asked if either they or their spouses have lost time from work because the person responsible for taking care of their children was not available.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


Up to 1996, the SIPP data regarding child care were not representative of all children. Until that time, the SIPP child care module was administered only when the respondent (usually the mother) was employed or in school. Also, arrangements made by families in which the mother is at home are not considered in SIPP, and the care arrangements discussed are only those that overlap the mother’s hours of employment or school, rather than any nonparental care arrangements. Also, fathers are included among child care providers in the SIPP, so the concept used is different than the nonparental child care concept in the ECCP. Further, while SIPP includes information on child care, the survey does not collect information on any other topics that are proposed for the ECPP survey.


AVAILABILITY


For substantive questions on the child care topical module, contact:


Lynda Laughlin

U.S. Bureau of the Census

4600 Silver Hill Road

Washington, DC 20233


301-763-2422


[email protected]


For information on the SIPP Child Care module and data access, visit the web site:


http://www.sipp.census.gov/sipp/sipphome.htm


TITLE


Survey of Program Dynamics (SPD)


PURPOSE


The Survey of Program Dynamics was created to assess how the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 impacted household that were previously interviewed in the 1992 and 1993 Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) panels. The SPD will simultaneously describe the full range of state welfare programs along with social, economic, demographic and family changes that will help or limit the effectiveness of the reforms.


SPONSORSHIP


The SPD was ordered by Congress in 1996 and was been implemented by the U.S. Census Bureau.


DESIGN


The SPD is based on the 1992 and 1993 SIPP panels, which was a multistage, stratified sample of the U.S. noninstitutionalized, civilian population. In addition to core questions on children’s school enrollment, participation in nonparental care, and enrichment activities, the 1999 SPD included a series of questions designed to measure child well-being. For the 1999 SPD, Census Bureau representatives conducted in-person interviews at 16,659 eligible households.


PERIODICITY


The SPD was conducted yearly between 1997 and 2002, and was intended to create a 10-year longitudinal database consisting of information collected in the 1992 administration of SIPP through the 2002 administration of SPD. The 1999 survey had a series of questions on child well-being.


CONTENT


The content of the SPD between 1997 and 2002 includes questions on the economic, demographic, and social characteristics of those interviewed. Information about children is also collected, including their school enrollment and enrichment activities, disability, health care, child care arrangements, contact with an absent parent, and payment of child support on their behalf. In 1999, the SPD included additional questions on children’s extended measures of well-being, positive behavior/social competence, and conflict between parents.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The SPD contains information directly related to the topics scheduled to be covered in the ECPP. However, the data are relatively old and there are no current plans for future administrations of the SPD.



AVAILABILITY


For more information on the SPD, including data files and publications, please visit:


http://www.census.gov/spd/


Email: [email protected]


TITLE


Women’s Employment Study


PURPOSE


The Women’s Employment Study was a five-wave panel study of mothers who were current or former welfare recipients in an urban county in Michigan. The study examined barriers to employment among welfare mothers. Its purpose was to identify the key factors that enable welfare recipients to remain employed and enable social service providers to better assess client needs and design targeted short-term and long-term service program components


SPONSORSHIP


The Women’s Employment Study was funded by the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, the Joyce Foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the National Institute of Child Health and Development, and the National Institute of Mental health. It was carried out by the University of Michigan’s Survey Research Center.


DESIGN


The Women’s Employment Study was a random sample of 753 single mothers on welfare who lived in an urban Michigan area. To be eligible for the study, the women had to be U.S. citizens, and white (non-Hispanic) or African-American. In-person interviews were conducted on a comprehensive set of barriers to employment, such as schooling, work experience, work readiness, job skills and credentials, experiences of employment discrimination and harassment, physical and mental health status, alcohol and drug use, family stresses including child well-being, experiences of domestic violence, and experiences in welfare-to work services and training programs. Questions such as the extent and prevalence of multiple barriers to work and co-morbidity among barriers, which barriers or combinations reduce wage growth, how barriers change as work and welfare status changes, and how barriers and welfare-to-work program participation are related, were also examined.


PERIODICITY


The first wave of the study was conducted in 1997, and subsequent follow-ups were conducted in 1998, 1999, 2001, and 2003.


CONTENT


The Women’s Employment Study analyzed the ways in which labor market, mental health, physical health, and family problems affect a woman’s ability to obtain and retain employment over time. Content related to child care included child care as a barrier to employment, number of current child care arrangements, type of child care used, and satisfaction with and concerns about care.





LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The Women’s Employment Study contains topics directly related to those covered in the ECPP. However, the small sample size and limited sample population does not allow for the estimates produced by the data to be generalized to the general population.

AVAILABILITY


For more information on the Women’s Employment Study, please contact:


Sheldon Danziger

University of Michigan

540 E. Liberty St.

Suite 202

Ann Arbor, MI 48502

Phone: (734) 998-8505


Email: [email protected]


http://www.fordschool.umich.edu/research/poverty/wes/


http://www.researchforum.org/project_general_100.html


















parent and family involvement in education (PFI)


This page is intentionally blank.


TITLE


National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 Children and Young Adults Survey


PURPOSE


The National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 (NLSY79) is a multi-purpose panel survey which began with a nationally representative sample of over 12,000 men and women who were between the ages of 14 and 22 years of age on December 31, 1978. Its main purpose is to follow labor force activities.


A separate survey, the NLSY79 Children and Young Adults, began in 1986 as an offshoot of the NLSY79 to collect information on all children born to NLSY79 female respondents. The purpose of the survey includes making assessments of each child's development and obtaining other demographic information. This data includes information on child-parent interaction, attitudes toward schooling and health and substance use. For children age 15 and older, data is collected on schooling, training, work experiences, health, and dating.

SPONSORSHIP


The National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY) is sponsored by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor


DESIGN


For the sampling of NLSY79, a group of housing units was selected based on a stratified multistage area probability sampling method in order to accurately reflect different characteristics of the population such as race, income, and region. Then screener surveys used to select eligible interviewees were administered in person at sampled households. Computer-assisted personal interviews (CAPI) are conducted in-person by an interviewer except for self-administered surveys. Most of the female respondents were between the ages of 43 to 51 in 2008.


For the NLSY79 Children and Young Adults survey, many of the assessments and much of the supplemental information have been collected from the child's mother if children are younger than 10. For children aged 10 and older, information has been collected from the children.


PERIODICITY


Participants in the NLSY79 were interviewed annually from 1979 through 1994 and are currently interviewed on a biennial basis.


The NLSY79 Children and Young Adults survey was initiated in 1986. For children aged 10 and older, information has been collected biennially from the children since 1988. Since 1994, children aged 15 and older information have completed more extensive interviews biennially.

The main focus of NLSY79 is to collect information on labor force activities. It contains detailed information on work history and job characteristics such as hours worked, earnings, occupation, industry, and benefits. The strength of the data is that some information such as work history, marital status, fertility and participation in government assistance programs, are collected in an event history format reporting the beginning and ending dates of different life events. The survey also includes questions on educational attainment, training, income, health conditions, workplace injuries, alcohol and substance abuse, and sexual activity.


For the NLSY79 Children and Young Adults survey, child demographics, family background characteristics, and a health history and information on the child’s home environment have been collected from the mother for children that were younger than 10 years old. Children aged 10 and older are assessed on child-parent interaction, and attitudes on topics such as schooling, dating patterns, and health. For children aged 15 and older, a child interview is conducted that includes attitudes towards schooling, training, work, health and dating. A self-reported confidential supplement is also administered to gather information regarding parent-child conflict, participation in delinquent or criminal activities and use of controlled and uncontrolled substances.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


Similar to the PFI, the NLSY79 Children and Young Adults survey covers a wide range of topics related to child parent interaction and the child’s environment. However, it covers a much broader range of topics not restricted to education, and less detail on educational involvement than the PFI. The biennial sample of children is approximately half that anticipated for the PFI. Furthermore, later rounds of the survey include a greater proportion of older children in the sample since the mothers have been reaching the end of their childbearing years. As a result, it is possible that the younger children are more likely to belong to middle class families where women have children at later ages. Therefore, comparisons of children of different ages need to be done cautiously. Since it is a longitudinal survey, the NLSY does not provide trend data on parent and family involvement like the PFI.


AVAILABILITY


For more information on Children of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth concerning data and documentation, contact the following


NLS Users Services

Center for Human Resources Research (CHRR)

921 Chatham Lane, Suite 100

Columbus, OH 43221-2418 USA


Phone: (614) 442-7366

Fax: (614) 442 7329


Email: [email protected]


http://www.bls.gov/nls/nlsy79ch.htm


http://www.nlsinfo.org

Data from the Child and Young Adult survey are available as a free download online at the following web site:


http://www.bls.gov/nls




TITLE


National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 Cohort


PURPOSE


The purpose of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 Cohort (NLSY97) is to collect information on the processes of moving from school to work among youth in the U.S. and to identify strengths and weaknesses in these processes. A particular goal is to identify the causes of difficulties some youths have in making the school-to-work transition. It collects extensive information about youths' labor market behavior and educational experiences over time.


SPONSORSHIP


The NLSY97 is sponsored by the Bureau of Labor Statistics.


DESIGN


The sample for the NLSY97 includes about 9,000 youth that were age 12 to 16 years old as of December 31, 1996. These youth were representative of a national sample of U.S. residents in 1997 who were born between 1980 and 1984. Over 75,000 households were screened in 147 primary sampling units (i.e., a metropolitan area, nonmetropolitan area, a single county or group of counties). In addition to the cross-sectional sample, oversamples of black and Hispanic youth were included.


During Round 1 of the survey, which took place in 1997, both the eligible youth and one of that youth's parents completed hour-long in-person interviews in the youth's home using Computer-Assisted Personal Interview (CAPI) methods. Youth also completed a self-administered survey that contained potentially sensitive questions. In addition, during the screening process, an extensive two-part questionnaire was administered that listed and gathered demographic information on members of the youth's household and on his or her immediate family members living elsewhere.


PERIODICITY


The data collection for the NLSY97 started in 1997. Follow-up interviews with youths have been conducted yearly.


CONTENT


The study collects information annually about youths' educational and employment experiences. Data on employment include employment status, characteristics of their jobs, work-related training, school-to-work program and their labor market behavior. Educational data include youths' performance on standardized tests, course of study, transcripts, and the timing and types of degrees although the transcript information has missing data. Additionally, the NLSY97 contains information on many other topics such as youths' relationships with parents, contact with absent parents, marital and fertility histories, dating, sexual activity, onset of puberty, training, participation in government assistance programs, expectations, time use, criminal behavior, and alcohol and drug use. Certain areas of the survey that are potentially sensitive, such as sexual activity and criminal behavior, comprise the self-administered portion of the interview.


The first round of the NLSY97 contains a parent questionnaire that generates information about the youths' family background and history. Information in the parent questionnaire includes: parents' marital and employment histories, relationship with spouse or partner, ethnic and religious background, health (parents and child), household income and assets, participation in government assistance programs, youths' early child-care arrangements, custody arrangement for youth, child's school history and parent expectations about the youth.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


Although the survey includes factors that have been found to affect educational outcomes such as the quality of parent-child relationships, family stability and structure, and parental marital quality, the coverage of the topics directly related to the PFI is limited because of its substantive focus on “school-to-work” issues. The age range of students included is also limited relative to students included in NHES. Additionally, since it is a longitudinal survey, the NLSY does not provide trend data on parent and family involvement like the PFI.


AVAILABILITY


For more information on the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 concerning data and documentation, contact:


U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

National Longitudinal Survey Program

Employment Research and Program Development

Suite 4945

2 Massachusetts Ave., NE

Washington, DC 20212-0001


Telephone: (202) 691-7410

Fax: (202) 691-7425


Email: [email protected]


For general information on the NLSY online:


http://www.bls.gov/nls/nlsy97.htm



TITLE


The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort


PURPOSE


The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort (ECLS-K) has two purposes: descriptive and analytic. It provides descriptive data on a national basis of children’s status at entry into school, their transition into school, and their progression through eighth grade. This data set enables researchers to study how a wide range of family, school, community, and individual variables affect early success in school.


SPONSORSHIP


ECLS-K is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.


DESIGN


A nationally representative sample of approximately 22,000 children enrolled in about 1,000 kindergarten programs during the 1998-99 school year was selected for participation in the study. ECLS-K used a multi-stage sampling method. The primary sampling units were geographic areas (i.e., a group of counties) and the second-stage units were schools that were selected based on the 1995-96 CCD Public School Universe File. The sample is designed to support separate estimates of public and private school kindergartners; black, Hispanic, white, and Asian children; and children by socioeconomic status. Data were collected from the individual child, the child’s parents/guardians, teachers, and school using mixed modes. Measures of a child’s cognitive skills are obtained through a one-on-one assessment of the child, conducted at the child’s school. Additional information was collected from telephone interviews conducted with the parent each time children were assessed. If a parent did not have a telephone, an in-person interview was conducted. Teachers completed self-administered questionnaires each time children were assessed (with the exception of the fall of first grade). School administrators, principals, and headmasters were asked to complete self-administered questionnaires during each of the spring data collections.


PERIODICITY


Data on the kindergarten cohort were collected twice during the base year of the study-- once during the beginning and once near the end of the school year. In the fall of the 1999-2000 school year, when most of the cohort moved to the first grade, data were collected from a 30 percent subsample of the cohort. In the spring of first grade, data were once again collected from the entire sample, their parents, teachers, and school administrators. In 2002 (third grade year), 2004 (fifth grade year), and 2007 (eighth grade year) child assessments were conducted and parent, teacher and school administrators completed interviews in the spring.


CONTENT


The main components of the child assessment focus on the child’s physical and psychomotor development, social and emotional development, and cognitive development in reading, arithmetic, and general knowledge. Characteristic of the children, their families, their schools, kindergarten programs, and classrooms are collected to examine the status of children at entry into kindergarten, the expectations of schools about what skills, behaviors and attributes are necessary, and how children fare in the new environment. Another set of issues looks at the family and community in which children live by focusing on the resources of the family, the home environment, and the community within which the schools must operate. The study also examines the roles that parents and families play in preparing for and supporting their children’s education and how families, schools, and communities interact to support children’s education. In particular, the Parental Involvement section includes a series of questions about the types of school activities parents attended, barriers to participating such activities as well as school choice.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The ECLS-K contains many items from prior NHES parent interviews that will likely be a part of the upcoming PFI. Both studies are interested in examining the role of the home environment and parent involvement in children’s outcomes. The sample for the ECLS-K consists of a single cohort of children in kindergarten through the eighth grade, whereas the PFI survey will include a much wider grade range. The PFI will allow for research to be conducted on changes in levels of parent involvement from kindergarten to the 12th grade. The PFI will also allow for information on the home environment to be collected for children who are home-schooled (ECLS-K is limited to children enrolled in a school at the time of the initial data collection. Those who were home-schooled at later rounds were marked as 'inapplicable' for school related questions).


AVAILABILITY


Data and documentation for the kindergarten, first grade, third grade, and fifth grade years, as well as three longitudinal data files (kindergarten through first grade, kindergarten through third grade, and kindergarten through fifth grade) are available via CD-ROM from the National Center for Education Statistics.


The web site for ECLS-K is:


http://nces.ed.gov/ecls/Kindergarten.asp


For more information on this survey, contact


Chris Chapman

National Center for Education Statistics

1990 K Street, NW

Room 9042

Washington, DC 20006


(202) 502-7414


Email: [email protected]

TITLE


The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort of 2010-11


PURPOSE


The Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Kindergarten Cohort of 2010-11 (ECLS-K:11) will provide data on a national basis of children’s status at entry into school, their transition into school, and their progression through fifth grade. This data set enables researchers to study how a wide range of family, school, community, and individual variables affect early success in school.


SPONSORSHIP


ECLS-K:11 is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Education, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, and the U.S. Department of Agriculture.


DESIGN


The ECLS-K:11 will survey a nationally representative sample of children attending both full-day and part-day kindergarten in either public or private schools in 2010-2011. Children's parents, teachers, schools and providers will also provide information on children's cognitive, social, emotional, and physical development.

Trained field staff will conduct direct assessment of children in their schools and telephone interviews with their parents. Teachers and school administrators will be contacted and asked to complete questionnaires. Before- and after-school care providers will also be interviewed.


PERIODICITY


Data collections are currently planned to occur in the fall and the spring of kindergarten (2010-2011), the spring of 1st grade (2012), the spring of 2nd grade (2013), the spring of 3rd grade (2014), the spring of 4th grade (2015), and the spring of 5th grade (2016). Prior to the base year collection of the ECLS-K:11, a field test will be conducted with children and their teachers for the development of new survey items.


CONTENT


In addition to data on children's cognitive, social, emotional, and physical development, the data will also include information on children's home environment, home educational activities, school environment, classroom environment, classroom curriculum, teacher qualifications, and before- and after-school care.


The ECLS-K:11 will differ from the previous ECLS studies in that it provides data relevant to emerging policy-related issues such as No Child Left Behind legislation, increasing school choice, and a rise in English language learners. ECLS-K:11 together with the original ECLS-K will allow comparisons between two cohorts experiencing different political, educational, social and demographic environments.



LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The ECLS-K:11 Parent Interview will contain some items on family involvement that will likely be a part of the PFI interview. The studies share an interest in children’s developmental status at school entry and early school experiences and their home activities with parents. In particular, the test fielding of the new questions updated to more recent educational issues such as school choice would provide useful information for the PFI. The PFI survey will provide data on a nationally representative sample of children enrolled in kindergarten through 12th grade, in regular school or homeschool, whereas the ECLS-K is limited to a single cohort of children who are going to be kindergartners in 2010-2011.


AVAILABILITY


Data and reports are not yet available.


The web site for ECLS-K is:


http://nces.ed.gov/ecls/Kindergarten2010.asp


For general information on this survey, contact


Chris Chapman

National Center for Education Statistics

1990 K Street, NW

Room 9042

Washington, DC 20006


(202) 502-7414


Email: [email protected]


Or,

Gail M. Mulligan

Project Officer, ECLS-K:11

National Center for Education Statistics

1990 K Street, NW

Room 9086

Washington, DC 20006

(202) 502-7491


Email: [email protected]





TITLE


Educational Longitudinal Study of 2002


PURPOSE


This study monitors the transition of a national sample of tenth graders as they move through high school and on to postsecondary education or enter the work force.


SPONSORSHIP


The National Center for Education Statistics sponsors the project.


DESIGN


The Educational Longitudinal Study of 2002 is comprised of three waves of data collection. A baseline survey (Wave 1) was conducted in the spring of 2002 and follow-up surveys were conducted in 2004 (Wave 2) and 2006 (Wave 3). This longitudinal study re-interviews the same individuals each wave. Future waves of data collection are planned for either 2010 or 2012.


In Wave 1, the sample size consisted of over 15,000 high school sophomore students and their parents, approximately 10,000 teachers, 750 principals, librarians and survey administrators. Sophomores completed cognitive tests in reading and math and one parent was surveyed for each student. Questionnaires were also completed by English and math teachers.


Schools were selected first, and then tenth-grade students were randomly selected within each school. Oversampling occurred for some population groups, i.e. Asian Americans so that comparisons would be valid between African Americans, Asians, Hispanics and whites.


In Wave 2, most sampled students were seniors, however some students were in other grades or had dropped out of school. The same 750 schools were sampled, with separate follow-ups for dropouts and a sample of transfer students. High school transcripts and school records for grades 9-12 were also examined.


In Wave 3, follow-up interviews were conducted using multiple modes such as web-based self-administered interviews, CATI (computer-assisted) telephone or personal interviews. Many cohort members were either receiving post-secondary education or employed.


PERIODICITY


A representative sample of sophomore high school students was surveyed in 2002. A sample of the original respondents was reinterviewed through a follow-up in 2004 and 2006. One additional follow-up is scheduled for 2010.


CONTENT


The study focused on identifying school attributes that determine achievement, parent and community involvement in student achievement and factors influencing students to dropout of school. Cognitive growth is assessed along with the issue of access to educational programs. The transition of students from high school to work or post-secondary education was also examined. The additional follow-up will provide students’ later outcomes such as attainment in higher education and their transition to employment.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


Data from the Educational Longitudinal Study of 2002 focuses on a cohort of secondary students, while the PFI measures changes in educational issues over time among cross-sections of children from enrolled in kindergarten through 12th grade.


AVAILABILITY


Additional information summarizing the study and the survey instruments is available on the following web site:


http://www.nces.ed.gov/surveys/els2002


For more information on this survey, contact


John G. Wirt

National Center for Education Statistics

1990 K Street, NW

Room 9028

Washington, DC 20006


(202) 502-7478


Email: [email protected]




TITLE


Family Involvement in Education: A National Portrait


PURPOSE


The purpose of the study was to examine how schools, parents, and employers work together to improve education.


SPONSORSHIP


The study was sponsored by the Partnership for Family Involvement in Education, the GTE Foundation, and the U.S. Department of Education.


DESIGN


Respondents were drawn from the General Social Survey (GSS 1996), a nationally representative sample of households. The total GSS sample was 3,814; with 2,904 of these cases interviewed. From this number, the National Portrait sample was drawn. Respondents were selected if a child aged 5 –14 was in the household at the time of the interview, and if the screener did not indicate an adult other than the respondent as the child’s primary caretaker.


Data were collected in May and June 1997, through computer-assisted telephone interviewing (CATI). The eligible sample totaled 523. Of this number, 376 parents actually completed interviews, for a response rate of 71.5 percent.


PERIODICITY


Family Involvement in Education: A National Portrait was a one-time national study in 1997; there are no plans for future administrations.


CONTENT


The study focused on the following areas: how parents feel about their opportunities to be involved in their children’s schooling, how schools encourage parental involvement in students’ learning, what additional educational resources parents value, and how and what schools communicate to parents about students’ learning. A portion of the study addressed before- and after-school arrangements and parents’ views on program quality and desirable program features.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


This survey contained many items that are relevant to the purposes of the PFI. However, the age range is not as wide as that planned for the PFI. In addition, the sample size for the study was much smaller than that of the PFI.






AVAILABILITY


For information on the Family Involvement in Education study, contact:


Adriana de Kanter

Department of Education

Office of the Secretary

400 Maryland Avenue, SW.

Room Number 6W312

Washington, DC 20202


(202) 401-0272


TITLE


Hand in Hand National Parent Survey


PURPOSE


The survey was part of a larger initiative called "Hand in Hand: Parents, Schools, Communities United for Kids," a national campaign to build and strengthen partnerships to improve the education of all children. The larger initiative has four major elements: a parents' survey to determine how parents perceive their roles and to examine parent involvement; an effort to increase public awareness through a national media campaign; work to encourage businesses to provide flex or paid leave policies so that employees can visit schools during the day; and participation in the Partnership for Family Involvement, a joint program of the U.S. Department of Education and the National Coalition for Parent Involvement in Education (NCPIE). Hand in Hand was developed as a response to Goal 8 of the National Education Goals 2000. It was established to share information about programs that expect, value, and nurture the family and community role in children's learning.


SPONSORSHIP


Hand in Hand was funded by the Mattel Foundation and coordinated by the Institute for Educational Leadership. The study was conducted by Marttila & Kiley, Inc., a national research firm based in Boston, MA


DESIGN


The survey was conducted with 1,032 parents of primary-school children in grades K through 6. Group discussions among parents of children in the same grade levels were also conducted.


PERIODICITY


This was a one time survey conducted between June 25 and July 9, 1995.


CONTENT


The study included items about parents' opinions about the importance of their involvement at home, at school, and with their children's schoolwork. Questions were also asked about school meeting attendance, the frequency with which parents spoke to teachers, involvement in homework, and barriers to involvement.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


This survey has many items that are relevant to the purposes of the PFI. However, the age range is not as wide as that planned for the PFI. In addition, the sample size for the study was much smaller than that of the PFI. Also, as the study was conducted only once in 1995, it does not meet the NHES goal of measuring change over time.




AVAILABILITY


Information about the study is available at the web site:


http://www.mattel.com/about_us/Comm_Involvement/ci_mcf_hist1.asp



TITLE


Head Start Family and Child Experiences Survey


PURPOSE


Head Start Family and Child Experiences Survey (FACES) is a national longitudinal study of the cognitive, social, emotional, and physical development of Head Start children; the characteristics, well-being, and accomplishments of families; the observed quality of Head Start classrooms; and the characteristics, needs and opinions of Head Start teachers.


SPONSORSHIP


The FACES study is currently conducted by Mathematica Policy Research for the Commissioner’s Office of Research and Evaluation in the Administration on Children, Youth, and Families, DHHS.


DESIGN


The original cohort of FACES (1997) had six phases of data collection using personal interviews and in-person child assessments. FACES uses a multistage sample selection of (1) programs, (2) centers, (3) classrooms, and (4) children. The sampling frame of Head Start programs was created based on the Head Start Program Information Report (PIR). The first phase involved a spring 1997 field test in which approximately 2,400 children and parents were studied in a nationally stratified random sample of 40 Head Start programs. The second and third phases of FACES occurred in fall 1997 (Wave One) and spring 1998 (Wave Two) when data were collected on a sample of 3,200 children and families in the same 40 Head Start programs. Spring 1998 data collection included assessments of both Head Start children completing the program and Head Start graduates completing kindergarten (kindergarten field test), as well as interviews with their parents and ratings by their kindergarten teachers. The fourth phase occurred in spring 1999 with data collection in the 40 Head Start programs, plus a kindergarten follow-up for children who completed Head Start in spring 1998. The fifth phase in spring 2000 completed the kindergarten follow-up for the children completing Head Start in spring 1999 and first graders who completed Head Start in 1998. The sixth phase in spring 2001 completed the first grade follow-up for the children who completed Head Start in spring 1999. An additional feature of FACES 1997 was the validation sub-study or embedded case study of a longitudinal sample of 120 randomly selected families from the larger FACES sample (three families from each of the 40 FACES sites were selected).


Four cohorts of FACES have been fielded to date – FACES 1997, 2000, 2003, and 2006. Each cohort has included a nationally representative sample of Head Start children and their families. The subsequent cohorts have followed a similar study design.


PERIODICITY


The study was launched in 1997, as described above. A new national cohort of FACES was launched in fall 2000, with a sample of 2,800 children entering Head Start and their families in 43 new Head Start programs. The 2000 study involved data collection in the fall and spring of the Head Start year, spring of the second Head Start year (for children who spent two years in Head Start), and spring of the children’s kindergarten year.. The data also includes information on their kindergarten enrollment in spring 2002 and spring 2003. The third FACES cohort was launched in fall 2003 with a sample of 2,400 children entering Head Start and their families in 63 new Head Start programs. The 2003 study involved data collection in the fall and spring of the head Start year, spring of the second Head Start year (for children who spent two years in Head Start), and spring of the children’s kindergarten year. The fourth FACES cohort was launched in fall 2006 with a nationally representative sample of children entering Head Start and their families in 60 new Head Start programs. The 2006 study is ongoing, and involves four rounds of data collection – fall and spring of children’s first Head Start year, spring of the second head Start year for children who were 3 years old at the time the sample was selected, and spring of the children’s kindergarten year.


CONTENT


The study’s main data components consist of three chronological parent interviews: the Head Start parent interview, the kindergarten parent interview, and the first grade parent interview. Each interview collects information on the family’s demographics, including employment and income, and home and neighborhood characteristics. The interviews also collect information regarding the child’s behavior and activities, caregiver, and disabilities. Other topics include: parent’s feelings and satisfaction level with Head Start, home safety, family health care, and community services. The first grade parent interview was excluded from the FACES 2000, 2003 and 2006 surveys.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The FACES questionnaires contain items about family involvement, many of which are similar to the PFI. The FACES sample is, however, limited to cohorts of children in preschool through the 1st grade and includes only those in Head Start programs.


AVAILABILITY


For more information on the FACES study, contact:


Maria Woolverton

Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation

Administration for Children and Families

Division of Child and Family Development

370 L’Enfant Promenade SW

7th Floor West

Washington, DC 20201


(202) 205-4039


Email: [email protected]

The FACES datasets and reports are archived by Research Connections, a web-based clearinghouse the offers a collection of more than 10,000 resources from the many disciplines related to child care and early education.


Its website is:

http://www.researchconnections.org


The FACES instruments can be obtained from:


http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/opre/hs/faces/index.html


TITLE


National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988


PURPOSE


The purpose of the National Educational Longitudinal Study of 1988 (NELS:88) is to provide information about transition periods between middle school and high school and from high school into postsecondary education or into the work force.


SPONSORSHIP


The National Center for Education Statistics sponsors the National Education Longitudinal Study of 1988.


DESIGN


The NELS:88 was conducted in five waves. A baseline wave (Wave 1) was conducted in spring of 1988, a follow-up (Wave 2) was conducted in 1990 and other follow-ups were conducted in 1992 (Wave 3), 1994 (Wave 4) and in 2000 (Wave 5). Sampling for NELS 88 was done using a list of all schools with 8th-grade. Schools were stratified based on the characteristics important to the survey's goals. A group of schools was selected from each stratum and a certain number of students were selected from each school. Self-administered surveys were conducted on school premises,


In Wave 1, the sample size consisted of approximately 24,600 eighth grade students in 1,052 public, private and parochial schools. A state supplemental sample of 4,000 students was also added. Eighth graders completed questionnaires and cognitive test batteries in group sessions. A self-administered questionnaire was completed by parents, teachers, administrators and principals.


In Wave 2, follow-up data from 96 percent of the student cohort in 1988 was obtained. Early dropouts (students leaving school before the end of tenth grade) and the transition of students to high school was monitored.


In Wave 3, the student sample consisted of about 25,000 students, 15,000 parents and 1,500 school administrators. Wave 3 collected information regarding the transition to work or postsecondary education.


In Wave 4, approximately 15,900 persons were sampled with an oversampling of Blacks, Asians, American-Indians, low-SES Whites and drop-outs. Parents, teachers and school administrators were not included in this follow-up. Information was collected through CATI telephone interviews, in-person and cognitive interviews.


Wave 5 focuses on what the cohort had accomplished since the baseline wave of 1988. Many of the students had completed their postsecondary education and were starting careers. Public-use data are now available for all waves.





PERIODICITY


A nationally representative sample of eighth graders was surveyed in 1988. A sample of the original respondents was resurveyed through four follow-ups in 1990, 1992, 1994 and 2000.


CONTENT

The student questionnaire included in this study covers a wide range of topics about transitions and outcomes that students experienced as they left middle or junior high school, passed through high school and entered post-secondary institutions or the work force. Students were asked questions about their experiences at home, in school and at work. Topics also included the process of dropping out of secondary school, how schools helped disadvantaged students, and the academic performance of minority students. Data was also gathered on neighborhood characteristics and the educational and occupational choices of these students. Students self-reported use of smoking, alcohol and drug use. High school and post-secondary transcripts provided information on course work and grades earned.


Parent interviews included question school contacts and involvement in school activities. Parents were also asked about their child’s activities outside of school, their opinions about their child’s school, educational expectations for their child and their financial plans for child’s post secondary education.


During Waves 1, 2 and 3, achievement tests in reading, social studies, mathematics and science were administered when most students were eighth graders, sophomores or seniors.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


This study is based on a cohort of 8th grade respondents and their parents and teachers in 1988, and therefore parents of children younger than 8th grade are excluded from the survey. NELS:88 suffered from a high rate of attrition and had a difficulty locating students after the base year as most of them entered high school.


AVAILABILITY


A free copy of the NELS:88 public use data files and electronic codebook is available from the individual listed below:


Jeffrey A. Owings

National Center for Education Statistics

1990 K St NW

Washington, DC 20006


(202) 502-7423


Email: [email protected]


To access information online:


http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/nels88/index.asp

TITLE


The National Household Education Surveys Program, Parent and Family Involvement in Education Survey


PURPOSE


The National Household Education Surveys Program (NHES) is a data collection system that is designed to address a wide range of education-related issues. It provides descriptive data on the educational activities of the U.S. population and offers policymakers, researchers, and educators a variety of statistics on the condition of education in the U.S. The Parent and Family Involvement in Education (PFI) survey has addressed multiple aspects of parent and family involvement, including family experiences with schools, schoolwork outside of school, and non-school family activities.


SPONSORSHIP


The National Center for Education Statistics sponsors the project, which is conducted by Westat.


DESIGN


NHES is a system of telephone surveys of the non-institutionalized civilian population of the United States. Households are selected for the survey using random digit dialing (RDD) methods. Each collection of NHES begins with a screening of a representative sample of households. Data are collected using computer-assisted telephone interviewing (CATI) procedures. In 1996, 20,792 interviews were completed for the Parent and Family Involvement in Education and Civic Involvement Survey and in 2003, 12,426 interviews were conducted for the Parent and Family Involvement in Education Survey.


One of the goals of NHES is to produce reliable estimates of the characteristics of children's and adults' educational experiences for the total targeted population and for persons of different races and ethnicities. The NHES sample design over-samples minorities in order to increase the reliability of estimates for these groups.


PERIODICITY


NHES has been conducted in the springs of 1991, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1999, 2001 2003, 2005, and 2007. The PFI survey was initially conducted in 1996. Several parent involvement items were included in 1999. The most recent PFI surveys were conducted in 2003 and 2007.


CONTENT


Parents and guardians answered questions about their children enrolled in kindergarten through 12th grade, up to age 20. Questions addressed family involvement, including the involvement of non-residential parents, in four areas: children's schooling, communication with teachers or other school personnel, children's homework and behavior, and activities with children outside of school. The survey also includes a few questions about school choice asking parents whether their child goes to an assigned school or a school of their choice and whether their school district provides such a choice. NHES is also one of the few national surveys that collects home school information.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


Because the primary purpose of NHES is to conduct repeated measurements of the same phenomena at different points in time, additional surveys are needed to compare the results over time.


AVAILABILITY


NHES data sets are available on CD-ROM from:

Christopher Chapman

NCES

Room 9086

1990 K Street NW

Washington, DC 20206-5456


(202) 502-7414


For more information on NHES, contact the NHES staff at:


[email protected]


To access NHES information online:


http://nces.ed.gov/nhes/


TITLE


National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development


PURPOSE


The purpose of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development (SECC) is to examine how variations in child care relate to children’s development. The study also seeks to determine how differences in child care experiences relate to children’s social, emotional, intellectual, and language development, and to their physical growth and health.


SPONSORSHIP


The study is sponsored by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD).


DESIGN


The Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development is a longitudinal research project involving 10 study sites across the United States. The study focuses on the experiences of 1,364 children, recruited at birth in 1991 from hospitals at the 10 data collection sites. The study was conducted in four phases. Phase I followed children from birth until age 3; Phase II followed 1,095 4 ½ year olds into the first grade; Phase III followed 1,073 children through the fifth and sixth grades and Phase IV followed the children through the seventh, eighth, and ninth grades (the exact number is still being determined).


Multiple methods were used to collect data. Phase 1 data collection included videotaped behavioral observations of the sampled children at their homes, child care settings, visits to project research laboratories and child care center directors' telephone interviews/mailed questionnaire. In-person interviews were also obtained from parents and caregiver to gain additional information about the children. As the children moved into school age, data from Phases II and III have also been gathered from classroom visits by researchers. Children’s physical activity was monitored directly at third, fifth and sixth grades.


PERIODICITY


The longitudinal study began in 1991 and the first phase which was made up of three month updates was completed in 1994. The second phase began in 1995, just before most of the children began kindergarten, and was completed in 1999 when all the children finished the first grade. The third phase began in 2000 when the children were in second grade and ended in 2006 when all the children finished sixth grade. The fourth phase began in 2005 when the children were in seventh grade and was completed in 2007 when the children finished ninth grade.


CONTENT


Although the study primarily focuses on early child care, the influence of the family on children's development is also an important component of the study. Family characteristics measured in the study include the family’s economic situation, family structure (single parent vs. partnered parent), the mother’s education, her child rearing attitudes, the quality of mother-child interaction, and the extent to which the home environment contributed to the optimal development of children. These family characteristics were used to examine the role of the family in the child’s entry into child care, the quality of that care, and the number of care arrangements. A second area of the study delves into the association between child care and the mother-child relationship. A third component looks at the characteristics of child care and how it relates to the children’s cognitive and language development, as well as their behavior and self-control in the first 3 years. Later phases of the study allowed researchers to examine whether any of the effects of preschool child care continue into middle childhood. The third phase of the study also allowed researchers to examine the effect of family characteristics and the home environment on children's outcomes in middle childhood, and the fourth phase of the study allowed researchers to examine those effects on children’s outcomes in early adolescence.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The study does not focus on parent involvement in education, although it contains a limited number of items about on the topic. In addition, the sample for the study is based on ten study sites, and therefore, it does not provide a nationally representative sample of U. S. children as does the PFI. Also, the age range of the study is limited to early and middle childhood (9th grade), whereas the PFI will cover children from enrolled in kindergarten through the 12th grade.


AVAILABILITY


For information on the NICHD Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development, contact:


James A Griffin, Ph.D.

Deputy Branch Chief

NICHD Child Development and Behavior Branch

6100 Executive Blvd, Room 4B05D

Rockville, MD 20852

(301) 435-2307


Email: [email protected]


Study results, publications, and applications for the data from Phases I through III are available at the following website:


http://secc.rti.org/home.cfm


http://www.nichd.nih.gov/research/supported/seccyd.cfm


TITLE


The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health


PURPOSE


The National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) is a school-based study of health-related behaviors of adolescents in grades 7-12. It was designed to explore the causes of those behaviors, with an emphasis on the influence of social context.


SPONSORSHIP


The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) and 17 other federal agencies funded the Add Health study. Fieldwork was conducted by the National Opinion Research Center of the University of Chicago.


DESIGN


The primary sampling frame was a database collected by Quality Education Data, Inc. A sample of 80 pairs of eligible high schools and their corresponding junior high schools was selected. The In-School Questionnaire, a self-administered questionnaire formatted for optical scanning, was the primary instrument. It was administered to a nationally representative sample of students in grades 7-12 in during the 1994-95 school year. In each school, one 45- to 60-minute class period was devoted to completing the questionnaires. Data were also collected from school administrators.


In addition to the school sample, an in-home sample was selected from the school rosters. Students in each school were stratified by grade and sex and about 17 students were randomly chosen from each stratum so that a total of approximately 200 adolescents were selected from each of the 80 pairs of schools. A total core sample of 12,105 adolescents was interviewed. Supplementary over-samples were drawn from certain ethnic groups. All respondents in the in-home sample were given the same interview. The majority of interviews was conducted in the respondents’ homes and took between one and two hours. All data were recorded on laptop computers. Students were also given the Add Health Picture Vocabulary Test, a computerized, abridged version of the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test. Over 17,000 parents were also surveyed by an interviewer using a paper-and-pencil instrument but only for the first wave.


PERIODICITY


There have been four waves of data collection. Wave I was conducted from September 1994 through December 1995. Wave II was conducted from April 1996 through August 1996. Wave III was collected from August 2001 through April 2002 when respondents were between 18 and 26 years old. Data collection for Wave IV was started in 2007, 6 years after the third wave, when respondents are between 24 and 32 years old. In Wave I, data were collected from school administrators, adolescents at school and at home, and parents. In Wave II, data were collected from school administrators and adolescents at home. In Wave III, and IV, data were collected again from the adolescent cohort but not collected from school administrators



CONTENT


The Add Health survey and interview focused on forces that influence adolescents’ behavior, in particular those residing in the various contexts of their lives: families, friendships, romantic relationships, peer groups, schools, neighborhoods, and communities. The questionnaire included topics such as the social and demographic characteristics of respondents, the education and occupation of parents, household structure, at risk behaviors, expectations for the future, self-esteem, health status, friendships, and school-year extracurricular activities.


The Parent Survey during the Wave I included questions on their education and employment, involvement in school activities, parent-adolescent communication and interaction, and their familiarity with the adolescent's friends and friends' parents.


Wave III of the study examined the transition between adolescence and adulthood by exploring choices that adolescents make (staying in school or dropping out, attending college or getting a job, etc.) Wave IV follows the cohort into their young adulthood allowing researchers to examine life trajectories of the cohort transitioning from adolescent to adulthood. Survey questions include educational transitions, economic status, physical and emotional health, behaviors and event history data on relationships and employment status.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The Add Health Study targeted a population of adolescents currently enrolled in either junior high or senior high school, thus the sample was not as broad as the PFI. Also, although the Add Health parent survey contained some items about parent involvement with adolescents that may be similar to those in the PFI, it does not directly measure parent and family involvement in education to the same extent and it cannot provide trend data on parental involvement over time, since it is a longitudinal cohort and the parent survey was not conducted after Wave I.


AVAILABILITY


A full report summarizing the study can be viewed on the following web site:


http://www.cpc.unc.edu/projects/addhealth/


For more information or to obtain the public-use data, contact:

Sociometrics Corporation
170 State Street, Suite 260
Los Altos, California 94022-2812


Phone: (650) 949-3282
Fax: (650) 949-3299


Email: [email protected]


TITLE


The National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (Canada)


PURPOSE


The National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth (NLSCY) is a long-term study conducted to monitor the social, emotional and behavioral development and well being of Canada’s children as they grow from infancy to adulthood. The survey provides data for use in research on the impact factors in children’s development and their adjustment to school in Canada.


SPONSORSHIP


Human Resources and Social Development Canada and Statistics Canada conducted the survey in partnership.


DESIGN


The survey follows a representative sample of Canadian children, aged newborn to 11 years, into adulthood, with data collection occurring at 2-year intervals. The initial sample was approximately 22,500 children, which was drawn from the Canadian Labor Force Survey’s sample of respondent households. The data are collected from several sources including parents, teachers, principals, and the children themselves. Most interviews are conducted by an interviewer using computer-assisted interviewing (CAI).


PERIODICITY


This is a longitudinal study consisting of several longitudinal and cross-sectional samples. Cross-sectional weights are provided when an age cohort can be considered to be representative of a cross-sectional population. The study began 1994 and is ongoing with data collection occurring at two-year intervals covering children and youth till they are 25 years of age. There have been seven cycles of data collection, in 1994-95, 1996-97, 1998-99, 2000-01, 2002-03, 2004-05, and 2006-07.


CONTENT


The survey assesses the child, the family and community environment in which the child is living. Specific topics include family structure/demographics, family and custodial history, parent’s education, parenting styles, importance of good grades, school involvement, and expectations for the child. Child care and child care arrangements are also topics covered by the NLSCY.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The survey is conducted in Canada and therefore is not representative of people living in the United States. The study, unlike the PFI, is not directly designed to measure parent and family involvement in children’s education but focuses on child development instead.




AVAILABILITY


Information about the survey, including instruments and data files, can be found at the following website:


http://www.statcan.gc.ca/cgi-bin/imdb/p2SV.pl?Function=getSurvey&SDDS=4450&lang=en&db=imdb&adm=8&dis=2


For further information about the National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth contact:


Statistics Canada

100 Tunney’s Pasture Driveway

Ottawa, Ontario

K1A 0T6



TITLE


The National Survey of America’s Families


PURPOSE


The National Survey of America’s Families (NSAF) is a survey of the economic, health, and social characteristics of children, adults under the age of 65, and their families. The survey pays particular attention to low-income families, reporting on important aspects about their lives and how they differ from the lives of children and adults in families with higher incomes.


SPONSORSHIP


The study was conducted by the Urban Institute and Child Trends, and sponsored by a number of private foundations. Westat conducted sampling and data collection for the study.


DESIGN


Sampling was done in a dual-frame design, with the main frame consisting of a random-digit-dial telephone survey, and the supplemental frame of nontelephone households. The survey was conducted in three rounds. In round 1, in 1997, interviews were conducted with 75,437 adults and about 34,439 children in 44,461 households. In round 2, in 1999, interviews were obtained for over 73,000 adults and almost 36,000 children in more than 42,000 households. In round three, in 2002, interviews were conducted for over 70,577 adults and 34,332 children in over 43,000 households. Oversize samples were drawn in 13 states. The sample was representative of the civilian, noninstitutionalized population under age 65. A short screener interview was used to identify and sample households on the basis of age composition and household income. After the screener interview, telephone interviews were conducted using computer-assisted telephone interviewing (CATI). Interviews with respondents in nontelephone households were conducted using a cellular phone that was provided to them by the survey administrator to minimize the effects of different modes used for interviews,


PERIODICITY


Cross-sectional data were obtained in three rounds: February to November 1997, February to October 1999 and February to October, 2002.


CONTENT


The survey contained several well-being measures having to do with economic security, health and health care, child’s education and cognitive and social development, child’s behavioral problems, and family and community environment. The survey was divided into the following topic areas: student status, parent/child/family interaction and education, household roster, child care, nonresidential parent/father, employment and earning, family income, welfare program participation, education and training, housing and economic hardship, and race and ethnicity.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


Although the survey included some questions similar to those in the PFI, (e.g., items about child support, teen employment, the Children’s Health Insurance Program), it was not directly designed to measure parent and family involvement in education. Thus the questions about education and parent involvement are few and lack the depth of the PFI does.


AVAILABILITY


Current data are available and can be downloaded online:

http://newfederalism.urban.org/nsaf/

http://www.urban.org/center/anf/nsaf.cfm

http://newfederalism.urban.org/nsaf/

For more information, contact:


Tim Triplett

Survey Associate

Assessing the New Federalism

National Survey of America's Families

The Urban Institute

2100 M Street

Washington, DC 20037


(202) 261-5579


Email: [email protected]


TITLE


The National Survey of Parents of Public School Students


PURPOSE


The purpose of this survey was to collect information on the views of parents of public school children regarding the importance of parental and federal involvement in education. The survey also collected information about parents who may qualify for Title 1 services.


SPONSORSHIP


Bennett, Petts, and Blumenthal conducted the survey for the National PTA.


DESIGN


The study was conducted as a national telephone survey among 800 adults who had at least one child in public school. Prior to interviewing, the sample was divided into two separate categories. The first was a national random sample of 600 adults. The second was a national random sample of 200 adults with a household income of $25,000 a year or less. These two samples were then combined and weighted to reflect the actual distribution of income for the nation’s population as a whole.


PERIODICITY


The study was conducted December 6-10, 1998. There are no plans at this time for further data collection.


CONTENT


The survey focused on the parents’ opinions about the role of parental involvement in education (level of importance, support of federal programs, being informed about school). Questions were also asked about their views of the role of federal government in education programs and the low-income families’ knowledge of Title 1 programs and services that may have been available to their child.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The National Survey of Parents of Public School Students measures only the opinions of the parents on the importance of involvement in education, not their levels of involvement within their children’s schools. Also the sample is limited to only parents of public school children, a narrower focus than the PFI. Because the survey was conducted only in 1995, it does not meet the NHES goal of monitoring change over time.


AVAILABILITY


For more information, contact:


PTA Office of Programs and Public Policy

1400 L Street, NW

Suite 300

Washington, DC 20005-9998


Phone: (202) 289-6790

Fax: (202) 289-6791


TITLE

Panel Study of Income Dynamics, Child Development Supplement


PURPOSE


The purpose of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) is to gather data on a broad variety of economic and demographic behavior and social issues. The Child Development Supplement is meant to provide researchers with a comprehensive, nationally representative, and longitudinal data base of children and their families.


SPONSORSHIP


Major funding for the Panel Study of Income Dynamics comes from the National Science Foundation. Additional support comes from the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, Department of Health and Human Services, the Department of Labor, the National Institute on Aging, the Office of Economic Opportunity, and the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.


Funding for the Child Development Supplement is primarily from the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) and its additional funds are provided by the William T. Grant Foundation, the Annie E. Casey Foundation, the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and the U.S. Department of Education.


DESIGN


The original Panel Study of Income Dynamics sample consisted of two independent samples. The first is an equal probability cross-sectional national sample of 3,000 drawn by the University of Michigan’s Survey Research Center, and the second is a sample of 2,000 low-income families drawn from the Survey of Economic Opportunity conducted by the Census Bureau.


This longitudinal study re-interviews the same individuals each year, following them through their life cycle. The study includes new family members as the individuals marry and have children. The survey collects data on all household members, but focuses primarily on the heads of household. The sample has grown to include information on 50,000 individuals spanning as much as 28 years of their lives. In 1997, the Child Development Supplement collected data on 0-12 year old children from a variety of sources, including parents, teachers, and the children themselves. There are approximately 2,500 families who participated in the research, and participants who are selected have been involved in at least one panel of Income Dynamics study. In 2002-2003, families were re-contacted if they had participated in the first Child Development Supplement and were in a PSID panel in 2001. The PSID was originally collected in face-to-face interviews using paper questionnaires. It then moved to computer assisted telephone interviewing in 1993.


PERIODICITY


The Panel Study of Income Dynamics has been conducted every year. The first wave of the Child Development Supplement was conducted in 1997, and the second wave occurred in 2002 and 2003. The third wave occurred in 2007.


CONTENT


The focus of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics is on economic and demographic information, including items such as income sources and amounts, employment, family composition changes, and demographic events. The Child Development Supplement serves to enhance the PSID by obtaining detailed data on items not generally included in the main database. The survey studies ways in which time, money, parenting and teaching styles, divorce, unemployment, etc. influence and affect children’s development cognitively, emotionally, and physically, and how this is buffered by family, school, and community.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The substantive focus of the supplement is on school age children’s academic achievement and cognitive ability, social and emotional well being, and health. The study does not provide direct information on the parental involvement topics planned for the PFI.


AVAILABILITY


Current data are available and can be downloaded from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics online:


http://www.isr.umich.edu/src/psid


For information and inquires about the study, contact


PSID Staff

The Panel Study of Income Dynamics

Institute for Social Research

PO Box 1248

Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1248


Phone: (734) 763-5166

Fax: (734) 647-4575


Email: [email protected]



TITLE


Program for International Student Assessment (PISA)


PURPOSE

PISA is an internationally standardized school-based assessment given to students fifteen years of age in reading, mathematics, science literacy and general learning competencies. The purpose of the survey is to capture the yield of educational systems on everyday learning for those about to leave secondary school. The survey is administered by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) every three years, the most recent round took place in 2006 in 57 countries, including 5,611 students in the U.S.

SPONSORSHIP


The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) at the U.S. Department of Education provides funding to complete the study in the United States, and Westat was responsible for U.S. data collection and analysis for PISA 2000 and PISA 2003. RTI was responsible for conducting the U.S. administration and analysis of PISA 2006.


DESIGN


The sampling frame was a list of schools having 15-year-old students obtained by each country. From this list, a minimum of 150 schools were selected in each country. Students were the second-stage sampling units. In most cases, 35 students were randomly chosen from a list of all 15-year-old students in each selected school. The total number of students assessed by PISA in each country ranges between 4,500 and 10,000.


PERIODICITY


The survey is administered every three years. The first assessment took place in 43 countries in 2000, followed by the assessments in 2003 and 2006. Sixty-two countries are expected to participate in the 4th assessment in 2009.


CONTENT

PISA assessment focuses on how much students who have almost completed compulsory education have acquired knowledge and skills necessary for their full participation in society rather than how much they have mastered school-based curricula. Students are assessed in the subjects of reading, mathematics literacy, problem solving and science literacy. Principals are also given a questionnaire on topics such as community, school, and student characteristics and barriers to student learning. PISA does not include a parent questionnaire.

LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


In addition to demographic and educational information of their parents, the student questionnaire asks students about their home environment for learning, values and attitudes towards a particular subject, perception of teachers, and learning activities outside of school. During the first year, students were also asked of family processes measures such as family members' involvement in homework, and their activities and communication with parents. Such measures have been found to be related to higher literacy internationally, however these measures have been dropped from PISA. Although PISA does not include parental surveys, the question items may be useful for developing family process measures for parents in the PFI.


AVAILABILITY


Information about the survey, including instruments and data files, can be found at the following website:


http://www.pisa.oecd.org/


http://nces.ed.gov/surveys/pisa/


For further information about PISA, contact:


Daniel McGrath, Program Director

International Activities Program-ECICSD

National Center for Education Statistics

1990 K Street, NW

Room 9010

Washington, DC 20006


(202) 502-7426

Email: [email protected]




TITLE


Prospects: The Congressionally Mandated Study of Educational Growth and Opportunity


PURPOSE


Prospects was initiated in 1988 under Congressional mandate as an assessment of Chapter I (formerly Title 1) programs. It was a longitudinal study designed to assess the impacts of Chapter I programs on school performance and compare students with "significant participation" in Chapter I programs to comparable children who were not receiving services. The study is nationally representative and was designed to inform policymakers.


SPONSORSHIP


Prospects was sponsored by the Planning and Evaluation Service of the U.S. Department of Education.


DESIGN


Prospects was designed to provide six 1-year "snapshots" from the following perspectives: economic disadvantage, as measured by sampling children in schools with very high concentrations of poor children and evaluating the nature of the educational environment of the schools that these children attend; characteristics of the children who received compensatory services, including Chapter 1; and characteristics of limited-English-proficient (LEP) students and the services that are available to them. The design is based on a multi-stage sample with public school districts as the first stage, school buildings as the second stage, and students as the third stage. The first stage sample was selected from 12 sampling strata defined by three levels of urbanization within each of the four Census regions. To select a large enough number of Chapter I children, school districts serving large numbers of Chapter 1 students were given a higher probability of selection. Districts and schools were stratified according to economic disadvantage and concentration of LEP students. The sample size allows for analyses by level of urbanization, by region as defined by Census, and for the nation as a whole. The design yielded approximately 320 schools in 150 districts and included samples of approximately 12,000 1st grade students, 12,000 3rd grade students, and 7,000 7th grade students.


PERIODICITY


The survey collected annual data for 6 years on three cohorts of public school children beginning in grades 1, 3, and 7 in 1991.


CONTENT


A total of 15 forms or questionnaires were used to collect data from students, parents, school records, teachers, and school and district officials. The parent questionnaire collected demographic information about household members, information on the child's previous enrollment in preschool, special services received, the child's self esteem, social skills, and disabilities. The questionnaire included sections called Your Child at Home (rules concerning schoolwork and household responsibilities, parent involvement with homework, reading with the child, expectations for the child's educational achievement, and educational family activities); Your Child at School (services received, parent involvement in school, parent's assessment of services received, school absenteeism, summer school attendance, grade repetition, and the parent's evaluation of the child's ability and performance); Contacts with Your Child's School (frequency and reasons for the parent contacting school, school response to parent contact, and types of in-school activities that the parent had attended); About Your Child's School (parent evaluation of school resources, practices and standards, and evaluation of parents' role in school); Your Child's Future (expectations about the child's educational attainment and provisions for education following high school); About Yourself and Your Family (household members, language minority status, parents' educational and occupational attainment and status, race/ethnicity, marital status of adults in household, total family income, and educational/media resources in the home).


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


This study focuses only on children in Chapter I in public schools; it therefore does not include a nationally representative sample of all children in kindergarten through 12th grade. Also, Prospects was completed in 1997, and future studies are not planned; thus, the study does not provide an opportunity to monitor change over time.


AVAILABILITY


The data tapes and CD-ROM are available for all years.


For more information, contact:


Daphne Kaplan

U.S. Department of Education

400 Maryland Avenue, S.W.

Room 6W201

Washington, D.C. 20202-8240


(202) 401-7949


Copies of the report are available from:


Planning and Evaluation Services

Office of the Under Secretary

U.S. Department of Education

400 Maryland Ave., S.W., Room 4165

Washington, D.C. 20202-8240


TITLE


Survey of Family and School Partnerships in Public Schools, K-8


PURPOSE


The study was designed to provide information on the ways that schools are engaging parents in their children’s education and the extent to which parents are responding to the opportunities for involvement that schools provide. The study was also intended to provide data that could be compared with data on the same topic collected from parents in other studies.


SPONSORSHIP


The National Center for Educational Statistics (NCES) sponsored the study with data collection by Westat.


DESIGN


The survey was conducted through the NCES Fast Response Survey System (FRSS). FRSS is a survey system designed to collect small amounts of issue-oriented data with minimal burden on respondents and within a relatively short time frame. Short questionnaires were sent to a nationally representative sample of 900 public schools enrolling kindergarten through eighth grade students. Principals were asked to either complete the survey or assign its completion to the person most knowledgeable about parent involvement programs and activities at the school. Data have been weighted to national estimates of all public schools serving grades K-8.


The sample for the FRSS survey was selected from the 1993-1994 NCES Common Core of Data (CCD) Public School Universe File, resulting in a sample frame of 60,000 schools. A stratified sample of 9000 schools was selected from the elementary school frame. To select the sample, the frame of schools was stratified by poverty status, as determined by the percent of students eligible for free or reduced-price lunches. Within these primary strata, schools were also sorted by enrollment size class and then by metropolitan status. The sample sizes were then allocated to the primary strata in rough proportion to the aggregate square root of the enrollment of schools in the stratum.


PERIODICITY


The study was conducted during the spring of 1996. There are no plans for further data collection at this time.


CONTENT


The survey addresses the following issues: the kinds of communication schools establish to provide parents with information, the kinds of activities schools sponsor that are designed to inform parents about their children’s school performance, the types of volunteer activities schools make available to parents, and the extent to which parents are included in decision making regarding school issues.



LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The Survey on Family and School Partnerships in Public Schools was not a parent survey. Instead, it is targeted at collecting information directly from the school. Thus it represented a different viewpoint than the PFI. Also, the sample was comprised exclusively of public schools. The survey did not collect information on any private schools or any grades beyond eighth in public or private schools.


AVAILABILITY


A full report summarizing the study and the survey itself are available online:


http://nces.ed.gov/pubs98/98032.pdf


TITLE


Survey of Adults and Youth


PURPOSE


The Survey of Adults and Youth (SAY) monitors youth access to parent and community resources. The survey interviews adults, parents and youth with a time use portion which covers after-school hours.


SPONSORSHIP


The Survey of Adults and Youth was designed by faculty from New York University, Columbia University and Princeton University and was sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the MacArthur Foundation.

DESIGN


The survey was administered to a nationally representative sample and a representative sample from five Urban Health Initiative (UHI) Cities: (Philadelphia, Baltimore, Detroit, Oakland and Richmond). Chicago was added later.


Interviews were conducted by telephone and were random digit dialed. The first wave sample for Round 1 consisted of 15,571 adults and 7,778 youth, with an adult response rate of 89 percent and a child interview rate of 74 percent.


PERIODICITY


The first Survey of Adults and Youth was completed in 1998-1999 and a second survey was conducted between 2001 and 2002. A third survey was completed between 2004 and 2005. Subsequent rounds will be repeated every five years.


CONTENT


The components of the survey include a parent survey that asks about conflicts between work and family commitments. An adult survey concentrates on youth issues, trust in local government and civic involvement. A youth survey provides information on parent-child relationships, the extent of involvement in supervised youth activities, educational expectations and achievement in school.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The Survey of Adults and Youth focuses on parent/child relationships, supervised after-school activities, conflicts between work and family and educational expectations and achievement. Also, this study is based on a regional sample and is not nationally representative.


AVAILABILITY


For further information about SAY, contact:


Tod Mijanovich

New York University

Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service

Center for Health and Public Service Research

295 Lafayette St.

New York, NY 10012-9604


Email: [email protected]

TITLE


Survey of Program Dynamics (SPD)


PURPOSE


The Survey of Program Dynamics was created to assess how the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996 impacted household that were previously interviewed in the 1992 and 1993 Survey of Income and Program Participation (SIPP) panels. The SPD will simultaneously describe the full range of state welfare programs along with social, economic, demographic and family changes that will help or limit the effectiveness of the reforms.


SPONSORSHIP


The SPD was ordered by Congress in 1996 and has been implemented by the U.S. Census Bureau.


DESIGN


The SPD is based on the 1992 and 1993 SIPP panels, which was a multistage, stratified sample of the U.S. noninstitutionalized, civilian population. In addition to core questions on children’s school enrollment, participation in nonparental care, and enrichment activities, the 1999 SPD included a series of questions designed to measure child well-being. For the 1999 SPD, Census Bureau representatives conducted in-person interviews at 16,659 eligible households.


PERIODICITY


The SPD was conducted between 1997 and 2002, and was intended to create a 10-year longitudinal database consisting of information collected in the 1992 administration of SIPP through the 2002 administration of SPD.


CONTENT


The content of the SPD between 1998 and 2002 includes economic, demographic, and social characteristics of the people interviewed. Information about children is also collected, including their school enrollment and enrichment activities, disability, health care, child care arrangements, contact with an absent parent, and payment of child support on their behalf. In 1999, the SPD included additional questions on children’s extended measures of well-being, positive behavior/social competence, and conflict between parents.


LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


While the SPD contains information related to home activities and family involvement outside of school, it does not contain topics related to the rest of the expected content of the PFI survey. Also, while it was a longitudinal survey from 1992 to 2002, the fact that it has not been administered since then means that more recent comparisons cannot be made using the SPD.


AVAILABILITY


For more information on the SPD, including data files and publications, please visit:


http://www.census.gov/spd/


Email: [email protected]


TITLE


Women’s Employment Study


PURPOSE


The Women’s Employment Study was a five-wave panel study of mothers who were current or former welfare recipients in an urban county in Michigan. The study examined barriers to employment among welfare mothers. Its purpose was to identify the key factors that enable welfare recipients to remain employed and enable social service providers to better assess client needs and design targeted short term and long term service program components


SPONSORSHIP


The Women’s Employment Study was funded by the Charles Stewart Mott Foundation, the Joyce Foundation, the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the National Institute of Child Health and Development, and the National Institute of Mental Health. It was carried out by the University of Michigan’s Survey Research Center.


DESIGN


The Women’s Employment Study was a random sample of 753 single mothers on welfare who lived in an urban Michigan area. To be eligible for the study, the women had to be U.S. citizens, and white (non-Hispanic) or African-American. In-person interviews were conducted on a comprehensive set of barriers to employment, such as schooling, work experience, work readiness, job skills and credentials, experiences of employment discrimination and harassment, physical and mental health status, alcohol and drug use, family stresses including child well-being, experiences of domestic violence, and experiences in welfare-to work services and training programs. Questions such as the extent and prevalence of multiple barriers to work and co-morbidity among barriers, which barriers or combinations reduce wage growth, how barriers change as work and welfare status changes, and how barriers and welfare-to-work program participation are related, were also examined.


PERIODICITY


The first wave of the study was conducted in 1997, and subsequent followups were conducted in 1998, 1999, 2001, and 2003.


CONTENT


The Women’s Employment Study analyzed the ways in which labor market, mental health, physical health, and family problems affect a woman’s ability to obtain and retain employment over time. Content related to parent and family involvement in education include questions about number of books, magazines, and newspapers in the home, whether anyone in the family uses a library card, how often household members read, whether anyone in the family takes the focal child, whether anyone helps the focal child learn letters and numbers, and whether anyone in the family has spoken to the child’s teacher for any reason.



LIMITATIONS RELATIVE TO THE GOALS OF NHES


The Women’s Employment Study contains a few measures that are related to home activities and family involvement outside of school, but it does not contain topics related to the rest of the expected content of the PFI. Also, the small sample size and limited sample population does not allow for the estimates produced by the data to be generalized to the general population.

AVAILABILITY


For more information on the Women’s Employment Study, please contact:


Sheldon Danziger

University of Michigan

540 E. Liberty St.

Suite 202

Ann Arbor, MI 48502

Phone: (734) 998-8505


Email: [email protected]


http://www.fordschool.umich.edu/research/poverty/wes/


http://www.researchforum.org/project_general_100.html



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