Information effects on parental choices for early childhood education and care

IF 5.1 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, APPLIED
Samantha Burns, Adrienne M. Davidson, L. White, Delaine Hampton, M. Perlman
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Existing research demonstrates that parents are poorly informed consumers of early childhood education and care (ECEC) services. Choosing such services is a complex process shaped by a combination of logistical limitations (e.g., cost/location), informational barriers and ideas about what the goal of care should be (e.g., education of young children or provision of an environment that feels like home). Experimental studies have also demonstrated that when study participants are informed of the importance of a specific decision, they engage in more complex decision-making. In this article, we test whether providing parents with information about the regulatory stringency of ECEC options available influences their choices regarding ECEC. A conjoint survey designed to capture quasi-behavioural choices for ECEC services was completed by 682 parents. Before engaging with the survey, participants were randomly assigned into either a control group or a treatment group that informed them about the stringency of oversight regarding ECEC options available in the province of Ontario, Canada. Receiving information did not meaningfully change the choices of the entire sample. However, a subgroup analysis revealed an important information effect on parent decisions for lower income/lower-education parents.
信息对幼儿教育和照料父母选择的影响
现有的研究表明,父母对幼儿教育和护理(ECEC)服务的消费者知之甚少。选择这种服务是一个复杂的过程,受到后勤限制(例如,费用/地点)、信息障碍和关于护理目标应该是什么的想法(例如,幼儿教育或提供像家一样的环境)的综合影响。实验研究还表明,当研究参与者被告知特定决策的重要性时,他们会参与更复杂的决策。在这篇文章中,我们测试了向父母提供有关ECEC选项的监管严格程度的信息是否会影响他们对ECEC的选择。682名家长完成了一项旨在捕捉ECEC服务准行为选择的联合调查。在参与调查之前,参与者被随机分配到对照组或治疗组,并被告知加拿大安大略省对ECEC方案的严格监管。接收信息并不会对整个样本的选择产生有意义的改变。然而,亚组分析显示,对于低收入/低教育程度的父母,信息对父母决策有重要影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.90
自引率
2.00%
发文量
0
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