Abstract

Young children’s access to early childhood education (ECE) is increasing in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), though often without attention to service quality. Monitoring quality requires classroom observations, but most observation tools available were developed in high-income western countries. In this article, we examine key issues in measuring ECE quality in LMICs and consider challenges and opportunities in balancing theoretical grounding, cultural- and contextual-adaptation, and empirical rigor. We then review the literature on observed classroom quality in LMICs, focusing on process quality. We find limited evidence that the constructs identified in high-income countries replicate in LMICs. Further, the very limited evidence that ECE quality measures used in LMICs predict child outcomes is almost exclusively cross-sectional and associations are mixed. We conclude by discussing how future research can build a stronger knowledge base about ECE quality and child development globally.

Highlights

  • Access to early childhood education (ECE) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is increasing, yet attention to the quality of these services is only relatively recent (Yoshikawa et al, 2018)

  • The existing research evidence from LMICs is insufficient to draw definitive conclusions, the findings suggest that the structure of the original Early Childhood Education Rating System (ECERS)-R could not be verified in two developing countries

  • Rigorous, longitudinal evidence is needed to examine if domains of process quality as measured by the ECERS-R are related to child outcomes in LMICs beyond correlations

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Summary

Introduction

Access to early childhood education (ECE) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) is increasing, yet attention to the quality of these services is only relatively recent (Yoshikawa et al, 2018). ECE quality in LMICs has been primarily studied using three widely applied observational assessments: Early Childhood Education Rating System (ECERS), Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS), and Measuring Early Learning Environments (MELE).

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