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Article
The impact of nursery education on a cohort of children born in 1958
Funded by: HM Treasury
Part of: Parental background and child outcomes
Date started: 01 April 2004
This project aims to shed light on the broad question of what types of early childcare can be most helpful for what types of children and in terms of what outcomes. Specifically, we focus on a cohort of children born in 1958 to assess the effects of attending nursery schools or classes, playgroups and LEA day nurseries and of early entrance to infant school on a variety of outcomes over the childs life, from cognitive development and socialization to educational attainment and labour market success.

In our methodological approach we first rely on extremely rich background data on child, family and neighbourhood characteristics to implement multiple-treatment non-parametric matching estimators. We subsequently exploit local variation in the public provision of nursery places in the relevant child population as an instrument for nursery attendance. To address the potential concern that LEAs investing in nurseries may also invest in other programmes that benefit children or have other characteristics that affect childrens development, we include a number of additional measures of LEA-level educational spending, policies and characteristics, as well as indicators of the quality of maintained nursery places themselves.

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09 December 2005
IFS Press Releases
Article
A new paper published today (9 December 2005) in Fiscal Studies, evaluates the effects of early education on a cohort of British children born in 1958.
09 December 2005
Journal Articles
Article
We evaluate the effects of undergoing any early education (before the compulsory starting age of 5) and of pre-school on a cohort of British children born in 1958.
01 July 2005
Mimeos
Article
We evaluate the effects of undergoing any early schooling (before the compulsory starting age of 5) and of pre-school on a cohort of British children born in 1958.

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