Beyond the Null Effect: Unmasking the True Impact of Teacher–Child Interaction Quality on Child Outcomes in Early Head Start
JoonHo Lee and
Alison Hooper
No 4826p_v2, OSF Preprints from Center for Open Science
Abstract:
In Early Head Start (EHS), teacher–child interactions are widely believed to shape infant–toddler outcomes, yet large-scale studies often find only modest or null associations. This study addresses four methodological sources of attenuation—item-level measurement error, center-level confounding, teacher/classroom-level covariate imbalance, and overlooked nonlinearities—to clarify classroom process quality’s true influence on child development. Using data from the 2018 wave of the Early Head Start Family and Child Experiences Survey (Baby FACES), we applied a three-level generalized additive latent and mixed model (GALAMM) to distinguish genuine classroom-level variability in process quality, as measured by the Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS) and Quality of Caregiver–Child Interactions for Infants and Toddlers (QCIT), from item-level noise and center-level effects. We then estimated dose–response relationships with children’s language and socioemotional outcomes, employing covariate balancing weights and generalized additive models. Results show that nearly half of each item’s variance reflects classroom-level processes, with the remainder tied to measurement error or center-wide influences. After balancing, domain-focused “dose-response” analyses reveal robust linear associations between cognitive/language supports and children’s English communicative skills, while emotional-behavioral supports better predict social-emotional competence. Some domains display plateaus when pushed to extremes, underscoring potential nonlinearities. These findings highlight how enhanced measurement modeling, multilevel confounding adjustments, and flexible dose–response estimation can more fully reveal the true impact of teacher–child interaction quality in infant–toddler classrooms.
Date: 2025-10-09
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:osf:osfxxx:4826p_v2
DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/4826p_v2
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