rockhopper72
New member
I recently ran across this:
Mathers et al, 2012. Improving Quality in the Early Years: A Comparison of Perspectives and Measures.
More generally, only one component of the Ofsted score had a significant correlation with the ITERS-R score at the 5% level, and that correlation was 0.12. Even that 'significant correlation' was probably an artefact due to not compensating for multiple hypothesis testing.
(ITERS-R is the Infant/Toddler Environment Rating Scale, and it's the one used in most research on childcare quality for children up to 30 months.)
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I was expecting a weak linkage, but I'm somewhat shocked at (essentially) non-correlation. As with many other things involving childcare, I feel like there should be more awareness of this, so we can make the world better for children and parents. But I don't know how to post about this outside @earvin without being rugby-tackled by people assuming I'm making some political point.
Thoughts would be welcome.
a setting graded as outstanding by Ofsted would not necessarily receive a high score on the ITERS-R, and vice versa
Mathers et al, 2012. Improving Quality in the Early Years: A Comparison of Perspectives and Measures.
More generally, only one component of the Ofsted score had a significant correlation with the ITERS-R score at the 5% level, and that correlation was 0.12. Even that 'significant correlation' was probably an artefact due to not compensating for multiple hypothesis testing.
(ITERS-R is the Infant/Toddler Environment Rating Scale, and it's the one used in most research on childcare quality for children up to 30 months.)
---
I was expecting a weak linkage, but I'm somewhat shocked at (essentially) non-correlation. As with many other things involving childcare, I feel like there should be more awareness of this, so we can make the world better for children and parents. But I don't know how to post about this outside @earvin without being rugby-tackled by people assuming I'm making some political point.
Thoughts would be welcome.