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Journal Article

Citation

Stipek D, Daniels D, Galluzzo D, Milburn S. Early Child Res. Q. 1992; 7(1): 1-19.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1992, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/0885-2006(92)90015-Q

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Detailed observations were done of instructional practices and the social climate of 62 preschool and kindergarten programs serving poor and middle-class children. Analyses revealed strong relationships between the nature of instruction (i.e., the degree to which basic skills and performance outcomes were stressed) and the social context (e.g., teacher warmth and responsiveness). Analysesrevealed that both preschool and kindergarten programs could be divided into three types: (a) "didactic" programs in which academic skills were stressed in a relatively negative social context; (b) "child-centered" programs, which deemphasized basic academic skills and offered a positive social context; and (c) "intermediate" programs, which fall in between these two extremes. Teachers' beliefs about appropriate education for young children were associated with the kind of program they taught in, but teachers' levels of education and experience, and school policies regarding formal evaluation, retention, and testing were not.

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