“What a Drag! I Have a Parent Meeting at My Kid’s Preschool.”
© Blog First Steps, IDB’s Social Protection and Health Division
by Patricia Jara
© Blog First Steps, IDB’s Social Protection and Health Division
by Patricia Jara
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© Blog First Steps, IDB’s Social Protection and Health Division
by Filipa de Castro and Jean Marie Place
Today, there is a general consensus about the fact that a high level of learning is important for economic growth. However, students in Latin America and the Caribbean have lower scores on standardized learning tests compared to other countries at similar stages of economic development, and much lower than that of the best performing countries. So how does the use of technology in education can help increase student learning? New technologies open opportunities to increase student learning and have the potential to reduce gaps between socioeconomic groups.
We study the socio-economic gradient of child development on a representative sample of low- and middle-income children aged 6-42 months in Bogota, using the Bayley Scales of Infant Development, a high quality test based on direct observation of the child's abilities. We find a statistically significant difference between children in the 90th and 10th percentile of the wealth distribution in our sample of 0.33 standard deviations (SD) in cognition, 0.29 SD in receptive language and 0.38 SD in expressive language at 14 months.