Early Impacts of Room to Grow: A Multifaceted Intervention Supporting Parents and Children Age Zero to Three

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Standard

Early Impacts of Room to Grow : A Multifaceted Intervention Supporting Parents and Children Age Zero to Three. / Wimer, Christopher; Marti, Maria; Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne; Waldfogel, Jane.

I: Children and Youth Services Review, Bind 126, 106041, 07.2021.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Wimer, C, Marti, M, Brooks-Gunn, J & Waldfogel, J 2021, 'Early Impacts of Room to Grow: A Multifaceted Intervention Supporting Parents and Children Age Zero to Three', Children and Youth Services Review, bind 126, 106041. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106041

APA

Wimer, C., Marti, M., Brooks-Gunn, J., & Waldfogel, J. (2021). Early Impacts of Room to Grow: A Multifaceted Intervention Supporting Parents and Children Age Zero to Three. Children and Youth Services Review, 126, [106041]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106041

Vancouver

Wimer C, Marti M, Brooks-Gunn J, Waldfogel J. Early Impacts of Room to Grow: A Multifaceted Intervention Supporting Parents and Children Age Zero to Three. Children and Youth Services Review. 2021 jul.;126. 106041. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106041

Author

Wimer, Christopher ; Marti, Maria ; Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne ; Waldfogel, Jane. / Early Impacts of Room to Grow : A Multifaceted Intervention Supporting Parents and Children Age Zero to Three. I: Children and Youth Services Review. 2021 ; Bind 126.

Bibtex

@article{32b7f71501294a9783d11c822515ddaa,
title = "Early Impacts of Room to Grow: A Multifaceted Intervention Supporting Parents and Children Age Zero to Three",
abstract = "Children experiencing poverty or low incomes fare worse than their more advantaged peers on a host of developmental and educational outcomes. Interventions have focused on strengthening parenting in families with young children, when supports appear to be most critical. But most parenting programs for low-income families fail to address parents' economic needs, which almost always take precedence relative to broader educational or developmental goals. In this article, we describe the early results of a multifaceted intervention aimed at supporting parents, infants, and toddlers in the first three years of life. The Room to Grow program provides parents, primarily mothers, with support from a clinical social worker, connections to community referrals, and up to $10,000 in material support for the baby in the form of in-kind assistance such as clothes, books, toys, strollers, and other necessities. The current study examines proximal outcomes of the intervention after one year using a randomized controlled trial evaluation design. The study finds that early impacts on proximal outcomes are uniformly positive, especially with regards to the presence of books and developmental goods in the home, developmentally-oriented parenting outcomes, and reduced stress and aggravation in the domain of parenting.",
author = "Christopher Wimer and Maria Marti and Jeanne Brooks-Gunn and Jane Waldfogel",
year = "2021",
month = jul,
doi = "10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106041",
language = "English",
volume = "126",
journal = "Children and Youth Services Review",
issn = "0190-7409",
publisher = "Pergamon Press",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Early Impacts of Room to Grow

T2 - A Multifaceted Intervention Supporting Parents and Children Age Zero to Three

AU - Wimer, Christopher

AU - Marti, Maria

AU - Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne

AU - Waldfogel, Jane

PY - 2021/7

Y1 - 2021/7

N2 - Children experiencing poverty or low incomes fare worse than their more advantaged peers on a host of developmental and educational outcomes. Interventions have focused on strengthening parenting in families with young children, when supports appear to be most critical. But most parenting programs for low-income families fail to address parents' economic needs, which almost always take precedence relative to broader educational or developmental goals. In this article, we describe the early results of a multifaceted intervention aimed at supporting parents, infants, and toddlers in the first three years of life. The Room to Grow program provides parents, primarily mothers, with support from a clinical social worker, connections to community referrals, and up to $10,000 in material support for the baby in the form of in-kind assistance such as clothes, books, toys, strollers, and other necessities. The current study examines proximal outcomes of the intervention after one year using a randomized controlled trial evaluation design. The study finds that early impacts on proximal outcomes are uniformly positive, especially with regards to the presence of books and developmental goods in the home, developmentally-oriented parenting outcomes, and reduced stress and aggravation in the domain of parenting.

AB - Children experiencing poverty or low incomes fare worse than their more advantaged peers on a host of developmental and educational outcomes. Interventions have focused on strengthening parenting in families with young children, when supports appear to be most critical. But most parenting programs for low-income families fail to address parents' economic needs, which almost always take precedence relative to broader educational or developmental goals. In this article, we describe the early results of a multifaceted intervention aimed at supporting parents, infants, and toddlers in the first three years of life. The Room to Grow program provides parents, primarily mothers, with support from a clinical social worker, connections to community referrals, and up to $10,000 in material support for the baby in the form of in-kind assistance such as clothes, books, toys, strollers, and other necessities. The current study examines proximal outcomes of the intervention after one year using a randomized controlled trial evaluation design. The study finds that early impacts on proximal outcomes are uniformly positive, especially with regards to the presence of books and developmental goods in the home, developmentally-oriented parenting outcomes, and reduced stress and aggravation in the domain of parenting.

U2 - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106041

DO - 10.1016/j.childyouth.2021.106041

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 34149135

VL - 126

JO - Children and Youth Services Review

JF - Children and Youth Services Review

SN - 0190-7409

M1 - 106041

ER -

ID: 273312556