High Quality Early Childhood Education Has Lifelong Benefits
Leah Langby
May 22, 2014
Keeping Up With Kids

In recent workshops in IFLS-land with brilliant presenters like Dr. Dipesh Navsaria, Jim Gill and Saroj Ghoting, we have been learning a lot of important stuff about early literacy, the importance of helping children and their caregivers get access to great resources and information about child development, and the lasting negative effects of unmitigated toxic stress.

A colleague in the public health field sent along an article about a new study that indicates the long-lasting health benefits of high quality early childhood education.  Previous studies have shown the long-lasting cognitive and academic benefits of high quality experiences.  The current one looked at adults who, as infants and young children, received consistent, high-quality care in one setting, the Abecedarian Project in North Carolina.  These adults now have a significantly lower risk of hypertension and heart disease.  “Even without pinpointing a single mechanism responsible for improved adult health, scientists…agree that early childhood interventions are an encouraging avenue of health policy to explore. ” (source

This has further implications for us as youth services librarians.  How can we improve the early childhood opportunities for young children?  How can we help support families and caregivers, daycare providers and grandparents and even teens who are babysitting?  For some great ideas, don’t forget to keep track of the Growing Wisconsin Readers Blog!

search all blog posts using keywords or title, date, categories

Archives

Categories

Related Articles

IFLS Youth Services Check-In: Play!

Great questions were asked, great ideas were swapped!  Here are a few highlights (sorry if I’m forgetting something):   Karen Magnusson (formerly of Woodville, now of Baldwin) gave a report about her experience at the Play, Make, Learn Conference in...

Great Halloween Cupcake Bake-Off in Phillips

Thanks to Linda Johnson, the new youth services librarian in Phillips, for sharing this fun collaboration.  Leveraging her existing connection with the school and with the Family and Consumer Education teacher, Linda organized a Great Halloween Cupcake Bake-Off for...

The Power of Partnerships (guest post by Valerie Spooner)

I had a great chat with Valerie Spooner, the youth services librarian in Ladysmith, this afternoon.  I LOVED hearing this story about the ways putting in the time for partnerships and relationships can pay off! In 2020 I was able to fulfill one of my library dreams -...