A Good Start


Implementing institution: Fundación Educacional Oportunidad

Country: Chile

Source: GEII Harvard

Execution period: 2008 - in progress

Plataforma de Prácticas Efectivas:

Challenges

To improve the quality of initial education, supporting the educational communities in the improvement of pedagogical and leadership practices, through collaborative processes framed in the continuous improvement of quality.

Solution

Professional development program for educational teams and administrators aimed at generating key learning in children, both cognitive and social-emotional, through collaborative work that includes training, reflection and peer learning.

Results

The results of A Good Start are outstanding in all areas. There are significant impacts on language, social-emotional development and executive function.

A Good Start is a teacher professional development program that seeks to contribute to the improvement of the quality of early education, supporting schools in improving the pedagogical practices of educational teams, increasing the time devoted to the promotion of language, creating a positive classroom climate, improving attendance and involvement of parents in the education of their children, all accompanied by intensive work with the administration teams of each school.

The implementation of the program considers collaborative work among the participating schools and includes monthly accompaniment to educators, early childhood assistants, administration teams and supporters of municipal schools. These are guided by Field Coordinators of the foundation, who observe, analyze and reflect together with the educational teams and directors the implementation of the proposed strategies.

The project is developed intensively over two years in each establishment, during which time the entire educational community participates in instances that allow them to share, reflect, feedback their experiences and results in the classroom through collaborative processes. Thus, teams learn from each other, recognize good pedagogical practices and leadership, adjusting or eliminating those that do not provide the expected results after short cycles where ideas are tested and results are studied. A Good Start program is developed within the framework of the Continuous Improvement Methodology (designed by the Institute for Healthcare Improvement, IHI, Boston).

Although Chile has high net participation rates at kindergarten level (91% in 2015), that participation has been declining between 2007 and 2012 (from 97.5% to 93.1%, UNESCO). In terms of the quality of the services provided, kindergartens are generally under-resourced, resulting, for example, in poorly trained educators. This general diagnosis hides very different realities between private and public establishments. There is a large body of literature that converges to say that, finally, the Chilean education system (and even initial education) tends to reproduce initial social and economic inequalities (MINEDUC, 2015).

Between 2008 and 2011, the Center for Comparative Policy in Education (CPCE) at Universidad Diego Portales, in collaboration with Harvard University, led an experimental study with a control group to evaluate the quality of teaching practices. It focused on its knowledge of the UBC methodology, the children’s language skills and their social behaviour. The randomized controlled trial included 1,876 children, 140 educators and 110 technicians in 64 schools in the Metropolitan Region. This study began the project itself, which has been in operation for 10 years.

The latest results delivered belong to Cohorte Cachapoal 2014-2015, which already incorporated the Continuous Improvement Methodology. Data were analyzed by researcher Ernesto Treviño and his team. It was developed in the Province of Cachapoal in the VI Region: 9 communes, 23 schools, 23 rooms.

In the words of the researcher in charge of the analysis, “to improve pedagogical practices through the construction of teaching capabilities in classroom and school teams; increasing effective teaching and learning time throughout the school day and increasing child attendance (…) UBC achieved significant impacts on language, social-emotional development and executive function.” This is because the intervention was continuously improved, because the program matured, and because, like the school teams and supporters, the UBC project itself implemented continuous improvement for itself.

The results of UBC (Cohorte Cachapoal 2014-2015) are outstanding in all areas. Results in language as in the identification of letters and words show an average effect of 0.3 SD. In emergent writing and text comprehension it is 0.3 and 0.2 SD respectively. The results in executive function, i.e. inhibitory control and motor self-regulation, there is an effect of 0.2 SD. Finally, as regards to social-emotional development, an effect of 0.2 SD was observed in externalizing behaviour and 0.5 in internalizing behaviour, pro-social behaviour, attention and impulse control. As a result, UBC children, to a greater extent than those in the comparison group, wait for their turn, think before acting, can be calm and do not interrupt course activities.

 

Link: http://www.fundacionoportunidad.cl/proyectos/un-buen-comienzo

Contacto: Padre Mariano 181, Piso 11 Providencia contacto@fundacionoportunidad.cl (2) 23621261

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