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Centre for Market and Public Organisation

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Title: Centre for Market and Public Organisation


1
Centre for Market and Public Organisation
The effects of shared parental childcare in the
first three years on childrens school readiness
Evidence from the ALSPAC cohort Elizabeth
Washbrook CMPO Seminar 12th October, 2006
2
Motivation
  • The early years are a vitally important period in
    childrens development

The most efficient strategy for strengthening
the future workforce, both economically and
neurobiologically, and improving its quality of
life is to invest in the environments of
disadvantaged children during the early childhood
years. Knudsen, Heckman, Cameron and Shonkoff,
2006
  • School readiness has been the focus of a large
    body of research (e.g. The Future of Children,
    Spring 2005)
  • Impact on resources required of school and other
    agencies
  • Association with illiteracy, teen parenthood,
    juvenile delinquency and poorer educational
    qualifications (Baydar et al., 2003 Rouse et
    al., 2005)
  • Interest in the effects of early intervention
    programmes

3
Motivation
  • Changing social roles of mothers and fathers
  • Employment rates of mothers of children under 5
    up from 25 in the 1970s to 55 in 2006
  • Fathers childcare as a main activity up from
    under 15 mins to over 2 hours a day over the same
    period
  • ALSPAC gives a unique opportunity to study
  • The roles of mothers and fathers in the early
    years for children born in the 1990s
  • The effects of trends towards gender equality on
    childrens welfare
  • Previous research has found
  • Negative association between very early maternal
    employment and child outcomes (Gregg et al.,
    2005 Ruhm, 2004)
  • Positive association between qualitative measures
    of fathers involvement and later outcomes
    (Flouri and Buchanan, 2004)
  • Introduction paid paternity leave in April 2003
    good for kids?

4
Overview
  • Definitions of shared parental childcare and
    school readiness
  • Organising framework
  • The relationship between parental endowments and
    shared parenting
  • The relationship between child endowments and
    shared parenting
  • Effects on school readiness and the role of
    selection bias
  • Heterogeneity in the effects of shared parental
    care
  • Testing some potential explanations
  • Testing the age at which the effects emerge
  • Conclusions

5
Findings Preview
  • The effects of shared parental childcare in the
    first 3 years (relative to maternal-only parental
    care) depend crucially on
  • The gender of the child
  • The age of the child when paternal childcare took
    place
  • The intensity of paternal childcare
  • Boys who experience long hours of paternal
    childcare ( gt15 hours per week) when they are
    toddlers perform poorer on academic assessments
    at entry to school than boys experiencing
    maternal-only parental care
  • This finding is robust but why?
  • Children who experience moderate hours of
    paternal childcare (5-15 hours) have better
    behavioural outcomes at age 4, but only if this
    care is begun after infancy

6
Definitions of shared parental childcare and
school readiness
  • Data ALSPAC cohort of children born in 1991/1992
  • Sample selection 6010 households with biological
    parents co-resident continuously from pregnancy
    until at least age 4
  • Parental childcare Considered shared if father
    regularly looked after the child without the
    mother present for at least 5 hours a week
  • School readiness
  • Academic Teacher-assessed Entry Assessment in
    first year of schooling (Language, Reading,
    Writing, Mathematics)
  • Behaviour Mother-assessed SDQ at 47 months
    (Hyperactivity, Emotional symptoms, Conduct
    problems, Peer problems)
  • Types of effect
  • Boys and girls
  • Moderate intensity (5-15 hours) and high
    intensity (more than 15 hours)
  • Year 1 and Years 23

7
Organising framework
  • Gary Beckers household production model

(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
Clear distinction Exogenous market and
non-market endowments ( wM, wF, v, E ) Endogenous
choices of inputs of time and money ( tMi, tFi,
xi )
8
What kind of families use shared parental
childcare?
9
What kind of families use shared parental
childcare?
10
Parental endowments and shared parenting
  • Parents socio-economic endowments
  • Education, occupation, age, quality of services
    in local area, availability of other family
    carers, housing tenure, family size
  • Parents non-market endowments
  • Mental and physical health, attitudes to
    parenthood, locus of control, smoking, drinking,
    attitudes to education
  • The theory of the intra-household division of
    labour implies shared parental care should be
    more common where
  • The fathers market capital is lower (less
    educated, younger men in insecure low skilled
    occupations deadbeat dads)
  • The fathers non-market capital is higher (men
    who enjoy childcare and are good at it new
    dads)
  • The mothers market capital is higher (highly
    educated women in professional occupations)
  • The mothers non-market capital is lower
    (career-oriented women, post-natal depression?)

11
Parental endowments and shared parenting
  • Fathers who provide early years childcare are
  • Less likely to have a degree or work in a skilled
    occupation
  • More likely to have lower earnings capacity than
    their wives
  • More likely to be under 30 at the birth of child
  • More likely to live in the most deprived areas
    and in non-owner occupied housing (long hours
    only)
  • More likely to be first-time dads
  • More likely to smoke and have relatively negative
    attitudes to education and personal
    responsibility
  • Do not differ from other fathers in physical or
    mental health
  • More likely to attend antenatal classes and be
    excited by the prospect of fatherhood
  • Mothers who share childcare are generally less
    differentiated than fathers. Post-natal
    depression does not appear to be a primary driver
    behind shared parenting
  • There are substantial numbers of paternal carers
    in all household types, including the more
    affluent (e.g. fifth of long hours dads have
    degrees)

12
Child endowments and shared parenting
  • Parental investment decisions are likely to
    respond to the innate characteristics of the
    child
  • Family fixed effect (FFE) estimates difference
    out the common inherited component of siblings
    endowments, but impose strong data requirements
    (not fulfilled in ALSPAC) and may introduce
    severe bias
  • Child fixed effect (CFE) estimates difference out
    any time-invariant child characteristics, but are
    only available if outcomes are observed before
    and after the treatment
  • Our approach is to condition on measures of child
    health, temperament and developmental ability
    between birth and 6 months

13
Child endowments and shared parenting
  • Temperament measures at 6 months

Temperament consists of relatively consistent,
basic dispositions inherent in the person that
underlie and modulate the expression of activity,
reactivity, emotionality and sociability. Major
elements of temperament are present early in
life, and those elements are likely to be
strongly influenced by biological factors.
Robert B. McCall, taken from Goldsmith et al
(1987), pp. 524
  • Nine dimensions of temperament have been
    identified, including approach (response to new
    people/situations), adaptability (long-term
    adjustment to change), persistence (ability to
    persevere in a task) and activity (being still
    vs. moving about)
  • Health measures at birth and immediately after
  • Birth weight, gestation at birth, complications,
    general health in 1st 6 months
  • Development measures at 6 months
  • Gross motor, fine motor, communication and social
    skills at 6 months

14
Child endowments and shared parenting
  • No significant differences in child gender or
    health at birth
  • Stronger associations between child temperament
    in infancy and paternal childcare in Years 23
    than in Year 1. This suggests that parents
    decisions are affected by the temperament of the
    child, rather than the reverse
  • Fathers appear slightly more likely to care for
    sons with easy rather than difficult
    dispositions, but we find fewer differences for
    daughters
  • Sons who experience long hours of paternal care
    tend to score higher on the developmental
    measures, particularly the gross motor and fine
    motor sub-scores, and particularly if the care
    took place in infancy
  • None of the differences were large. We conclude
    that child endowments do not appear to be an
    important determinant of shared parental
    childcare, although fathers may be slightly more
    likely to care for boys with relatively positive
    characteristics

15
Effects on school readiness and the role of
selection bias Unconditional OLS estimates
  • All measures standardised to mean 100, standard
    deviation 10 on full sample available.
  • Higher behaviour scores indicate greater
    behavioural problems
  • Conditioning variables Childcare by
    family/friend and by paid carer Y1 Y23 (8
    dummies), childcare arrangements age 3 to school
    entry (6 dummies)

16
Entry Assessment Boys
  • A. Childcare history B. Socio-economic
    endowments C Fathers personal endowments D.
    Mothers personal endowments E. Child endowments
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis H0 ?? 0
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

17
Entry Assessment Girls
  • A. Childcare history B. Socio-economic
    endowments C Fathers personal endowments D.
    Mothers personal endowments E. Child endowments
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis H0 ?? 0
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

18
Behavioural problems Boys
  • A. Childcare history B. Socio-economic
    endowments C Fathers personal endowments D.
    Mothers personal endowments E. Child endowments
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis H0 ?? 0
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

19
Behavioural problems Girls
  • A. Childcare history B. Socio-economic
    endowments C Fathers personal endowments D.
    Mothers personal endowments E. Child endowments
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis H0 ?? 0
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

20
Interaction effectsLong hours of paternal care
in Years 23 on boys Entry Assessment
  • Top coefficient is effect for group with
    characteristic, bottom coefficient for group
    without characteristic
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis that
    effects are equal
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

21
Interaction effectsMedium hours of paternal
care in Year 1 on boys Behavioural problems
  • Top coefficient is effect for group with
    characteristic, bottom coefficient for group
    without characteristic
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis that
    effects are equal
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

22
Interaction effectsMedium hours of paternal
care in Year 1 on girls Behavioural problems
  • Top coefficient is effect for group with
    characteristic, bottom coefficient for group
    without characteristic
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis that
    effects are equal
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

23
Interaction effectsMedium hours of paternal
care in Years 23 on boys Behavioural problems
  • Top coefficient is effect for group with
    characteristic, bottom coefficient for group
    without characteristic
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis that
    effects are equal
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

24
Interaction effectsMedium hours of paternal
care in Years 23 on girls Behavioural problems
  • Top coefficient is effect for group with
    characteristic, bottom coefficient for group
    without characteristic
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis that
    effects are equal
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

25
Some potential explanations
  • Household income
  • Parental relationship quality
  • Conflict, e.g. shouting, hitting, throwing
    things, walking out of the house
  • Mothers satisfaction, e.g. finances, time
    together, sex, major decisions
  • Joint leisure activities, e.g. going out for a
    meal, visiting friends
  • Communication, e.g. laughed together, kissed or
    hugged, discussed day
  • Attitudes to parenthood
  • E.g. Children are fun I enjoy watching my
    child develop I dislike the mess that
    surrounds my child I would have preferred not
    have had this child when we did
  • Parenting behaviours and the home environment
  • E.g. frequency to reading, singing, playing with
    child breastfeeding outings time with other
    children time watching TV toys and books
  • Value-added specification
  • Health, temperament and development between 15
    and 30 months

26
Entry Assessment Boys
  • F. Parent and child endowments childcare
    history G. Household income H. Parental
    relationship quality I. Attitudes to parenthood,
    J. Parenting behaviours and the home environment
    K. Child outcomes 15-30 months
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis H0 ?? 0
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

27
Entry Assessment Girls
  • F. Parent and child endowments childcare
    history G. Household income H. Parental
    relationship quality I. Attitudes to parenthood,
    J. Parenting behaviours and the home environment
    K. Child outcomes 15-30 months
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis H0 ?? 0
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

28
Behavioural problems Boys
  • F. Parent and child endowments childcare
    history G. Household income H. Parental
    relationship quality I. Attitudes to parenthood,
    J. Parenting behaviours and the home environment
    K. Child outcomes 15-30 months
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis H0 ?? 0
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

29
Behavioural problems Girls
  • F. Parent and child endowments childcare
    history G. Household income H. Parental
    relationship quality I. Attitudes to parenthood,
    J. Parenting behaviours and the home environment
    K. Child outcomes 15-30 months
  • indicates rejection of null hypothesis H0 ?? 0
  • , , and indicate significance at the 1, 5
    and 10 levels respectively

30
Conclusions Entry Assessment
  • We find that boys who experience long hours of
    shared parental care when they are toddlers (20
    of the boys in our sample) perform more poorly on
    academic assessments on entry to school, and the
    magnitude of this effect is non-trivial
  • We find no averse effects of shared childcare on
    girls Entry Assessment, and no adverse effects
    of shared childcare in infancy, or care of
    moderate intensity in the later period
  • The negative effect we identify for boys cannot
    be explained by selection in the observable
    endowments of either parents or the boys
    themselves
  • The effect appears robust across a wide variety
    of sub-groups of boys in different types of
    household. The exception is that it appears to be
    restricted to boys who did not experience any
    non-parental form of childcare when they were
    toddlers.
  • The negative effect appears to emerge after the
    age of 2½ as we find that it is not reduced at
    all by controlling for a range of measures of
    health, temperament and developmental ability
    prior to this age
  • Boys poorer academic ability does not appear to
    be accompanied by any increase in behavioural
    problems

31
Conclusions Entry Assessment
  • Examination of a number of measures of the home
    environment do not provide any real explanation
    for this finding
  • Attachment theory stresses the importance of
    mother-infant attachment, but the key period for
    attachments to form between 6 and 9 months, not
    in the toddler years
  • Entry Assessment is comprised of teachers
    ratings of ability. It is possible that standards
    are higher in the schools attended by boys in
    this group, but given the diversity in family
    background of boys in this group this seems
    unlikely
  • It is also possible that there is systematic
    teacher bias in assessments, but this would
    require that teachers observe some marker for
    shared parental childcare in the early years

32
Conclusions Behaviour
  • Moderate hours of paternal childcare are
    associated with fewer behaviour problems in
    children, but only if that care begins after the
    first year of life (25 of cases).
  • Moderate hours that begin in Year 1 but then stop
    (only 4 of cases) are associated with small
    adverse effects on behaviour, particularly in the
    sons of mothers who are not employed, suffer PND
    and who have low quality mother-child
    interactions.
  • Moderate paternal care that is maintained over
    the 3 years (11) is not associated with any
    differences compared to maternal-only parental
    care.
  • We find similar effects of boys and girls,
    although the effects for girls are smaller and
    less precisely estimated
  • Long hours of paternal care, either of infants or
    of toddlers, are not associated with any effect
    on behaviour compared with maternal-only parental
    care.
  • These effects appear to have already emerged to
    some degree by age 2½. It is possible that these
    results reflect selection in terms of child
    endowments that is not apparent at 6 months.

33
EXTRA SLIDES
34
Is there heterogeneity in the effects of shared
parental care? Other results
35
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