Child Care Policy as an Anti-Poverty Strategy: The Need to Address Neurophysiological Self-Regulation

IF 3.4 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Steven J. Holochwost, Lindsay A. Gomes, Cathi B. Propper, E. Brown, I. Iruka
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

High-quality early care and education can mitigate the short- and long-term effects of poverty on young children’s development. Therefore, policies that expand access to high-quality early care and education can be an effective anti-poverty strategy. A number of programs demonstrably foster volitional processes of self-regulation—the capacity to control emotions, thoughts, and behaviors—among young children in poverty. However, relatively little is known about how the activity of the neurophysiological systems that form the interface between brain and body supports these processes of self-regulation in early care and education settings. Maximizing the efficacy of early care and education as an anti-poverty strategy requires adopting policies to advance three interrelated goals: understanding, accommodating, and reconfiguring young children’s neurophysiological function in the early care and education environment.
儿童保育政策作为反贫困战略:需要解决神经生理自我调节
高质量的早期护理和教育可以减轻贫困对幼儿发展的短期和长期影响。因此,扩大获得高质量早期护理和教育的机会的政策可以成为一项有效的反贫困战略。许多项目显然在贫困儿童中培养了自我调节的意志过程,即控制情绪、思想和行为的能力。然而,对于形成大脑和身体之间界面的神经生理学系统的活动如何在早期护理和教育环境中支持这些自我调节过程,人们知之甚少。要最大限度地提高早期护理和教育作为一项反贫困战略的效力,就需要采取政策来推进三个相互关联的目标:理解、适应和重新配置幼儿在早期护理和教学环境中的神经生理学功能。
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来源期刊
Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences Social Sciences-Public Administration
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
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