Home-Based Child Care Toolkit for Nurturing School-Age Children Study
1 other identifier
observational
419
1 country
1
Brief Summary
The goal of this observational study is to build psychometric evidence for the Home-Based Child Care Toolkit for Nurturing School-Age Children (HBCC-NSAC Toolkit) provider questionnaire. The main objectives of the study are to: 1) assess the reliability of the HBCC-NSAC Toolkit provider questionnaire, 2) assess the evidence for its validity compared to other existing measures of HBCC quality, and 3) examine invariance across subgroups (that is, look for the absence of any differential item functioning \[DIF\]). HBCC provider participants will complete a questionnaire in the HBCC-NSAC Toolkit. A subset of providers will also participate in an observation of their child care setting. Parents or guardians of children receiving care from HBCC providers will complete a survey.
Trial Health
Trial Health Score
Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach
participants targeted
Target at P75+ for all trials
Started Mar 2024
Shorter than P25 for all trials
1 active site
Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.
Trial Relationships
Click on a node to explore related trials.
Study Timeline
Key milestones and dates
First Submitted
Initial submission to the registry
March 11, 2024
CompletedStudy Start
First participant enrolled
March 15, 2024
CompletedFirst Posted
Study publicly available on registry
March 26, 2024
CompletedPrimary Completion
Last participant's last visit for primary outcome
July 26, 2024
CompletedStudy Completion
Last participant's last visit for all outcomes
July 26, 2024
CompletedAugust 9, 2024
August 1, 2024
4 months
March 11, 2024
August 7, 2024
Conditions
Keywords
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcomes (4)
The Home-Based Child Care Toolkit for Nurturing School-Age Children provider questionnaire
We will assess reliability and validity of the English version of the HBCC-NSAC Toolkit provider questionnaire by administering the provider questionnaire by web/paper/phone to HBCC providers. It was developed by the study team to collect information about how providers support children in their care across five domains: 1) Support for social development, 2) Support for emotional development, 3) Positive and proactive behavior management, 4) Support for learning, 5) Support for health and physical development. Scales, # of items, range scores Emotional development (33 items): 33-231 Social development (41 items): 41-287 Behavior management (22 items): 22-154 Learning (26 items): 26-182 Health and physical development (27 items): 27-189 Higher scores indicate provider does practices more often.
6 months
Emlen Scales
For validation purposes in this study, we will administer items from sub-scales in the Emlen Scales (Emlen 2000; composite subscale, parent's perception of caregiver's cultural sensitivity subscale and happy, safe, secure subscale). These items will be embedded in the family survey administered to family respondents. The study team selected the Emlen subscales from measures used in the field that the team hypothesized are associated with constructs represented in the domains and dimensions in the provider questionnaire. We will compare families' responses to the Emlen scale against provider's responses in the provider questionnaire in order to help validate the provider questionnaire. Scales, number of items, and range of scores: Parent scale measuring quality of child care (composite scale, 15 items): 15-75 Risks to health, safety, and well-being (10 items): 10-50 Rich activities and environment (5 items): 5-25 Higher scores indicate higher parent satisfac
6 months
Multicultural Teaching Competency Scale
For validation purposes, we will administer items from the Multicultural Teaching Competency Scale (MTCS; Spanierman, 2011). These items will be embedded in the provider questionnaire administered to providers. We will compare responses to the MTCS against provider's responses to certain items in the provider questionnaire in order to help validate specific dimensions in the provider questionnaire. Multicultural Teaching Competency scales, number of items, and range of scores Multicultural Teaching Skill (10 items): 10-60 Multicultural Teaching Knowledge (6 items): 6-36 Total score (16 items): 16-96 Higher scores indicate greater levels of multicultural teaching competency.
6 months
Family Child Care Program Quality Assessment (FCC PQA)
For validation purposes, we will conduct observations of providers' child care settings using the Family Child Care Program Quality Assessment (FCC PQA). The FCC PQA is designed to assess quality in FCC homes that is appropriate across various FCC size settings and age groups, including school age. The FCC PQA assesses the setting's learning environment, adult-child interactions, daily routine, and safety considerations. We will conduct the observations in-person and each observation will take approximately 3 to 4 hours to complete. Family Child Care Program Quality Assessment scales, number of items, and range of scores Daily Schedule Sum Score (8 items): 8-40 Learning Environment Sum Score (9 items): 9-45 Provider-Child Interaction Sum Score (12 items): 12-60 Safe and Healthy Environment Sum Score (7 items): 7-35 Total Sum Score (36 items): 36-180 Higher scores indicate higher setting quality.
6 months
Study Arms (3)
HBCC providers (no observation)
This group will include 100 purposively selected providers from diverse backgrounds who will each complete the provider questionnaire and will also be asked to recruit one or more families to complete the family survey.
HBCC providers (observation)
This group will include 50 purposively selected providers from diverse backgrounds who will each complete the provider questionnaire, be asked to recruit one or more families to complete the family survey, and agree to have their child care setting observed by a field staff member.
Families
This group will include up to 166 purposively selected families who will each receive the family survey.
Eligibility Criteria
The study team will collect information from up to 150 home-based providers who at the time of collection regularly care for at least one school-age child (age 5 and in kindergarten, or ages 6 through 12) as well as from up to 150 family members with at least one school-age child in HBCC. The study team will use a non-probability, purposive approach to select a convenience sample of home-based providers to participate in at least 10 states in different regions of the United States (states vary on HBCC licensing rules). Of the 150 providers, the team will recruit 50 of these providers to participate in observations in a subset (at least 2) of the study states. The study team will recruit family respondents by asking participating providers to distribute the family survey to all eligible families in their care.
You may qualify if:
- The families must be the parent or guardian of school-age children who receive care in a home-based child care setting for at least 10 hours per week and 8 weeks per year.
- All participants must be at least 18 years old and be able to read and answer questions in English.
You may not qualify if:
- Child care providers who do not care for at least one school-age child in a home setting for at least 10 hours per week and 8 weeks per year.
- Parents or guardians of children (families) who do not have school-age children who receive child care in a home for at least 10 hours per week and 8 weeks per year.
- Any providers or family members who are below 18 years old.
- Any providers or family members who cannot read and answer questions in English.
Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.
Sponsors & Collaborators
Study Sites (1)
Mathematica Policy Research
Washington D.C., District of Columbia, 20002, United States
Study Officials
- STUDY DIRECTOR
Ashley Kopack Klein
Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.
Study Design
- Study Type
- observational
- Observational Model
- COHORT
- Time Perspective
- OTHER
- Sponsor Type
- OTHER
- Responsible Party
- SPONSOR
Study Record Dates
First Submitted
March 11, 2024
First Posted
March 26, 2024
Study Start
March 15, 2024
Primary Completion
July 26, 2024
Study Completion
July 26, 2024
Last Updated
August 9, 2024
Record last verified: 2024-08
Data Sharing
- IPD Sharing
- Will not share