Establishing performance standards for child development: learnings from the ECDI2030.

Child development Measurement Performance standards SDGs

Journal

Journal of health, population, and nutrition
ISSN: 2072-1315
Titre abrégé: J Health Popul Nutr
Pays: Bangladesh
ID NLM: 100959228

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
12 Dec 2023
Historique:
received: 24 04 2023
accepted: 02 12 2023
medline: 13 12 2023
pubmed: 13 12 2023
entrez: 13 12 2023
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Standards of early childhood development (ECD) are needed to determine whether children living in different contexts are developmentally on track. The Early Childhood Development Index 2030 (ECDI2030) is a population-level measure intended to be used in household surveys to collect globally comparable data on one of the indicators chosen to monitor progress toward target 4.2 of the Sustainable Development Goals: The proportion of children aged 24-59 months who are developmentally on track in health, learning and psychosocial well-being. To define performance cut-scores for the ECDI2030 we followed a criterion-referenced standard setting exercise using the modified Angoff method. The exercise gauged the expectations from 15 global experts in ECD and was informed by representative population data collected in Mexico and the State of Palestine. The final calibrated age-specific performance cut-scores were applied to these data to estimate the proportion of children developmentally on track, disaggregated by background characteristics, including the child's sex and attendance to early childhood education. Through a process of standard setting, we generated robust performance standards for the ECDI2030 by establishing five age-specific cut-scores to identify children as developmentally on track. This paper demonstrated how the standard setting methodology, typically applied to measures in the health and education fields, could be applied to a measure of child development. By creating robust criterion-referenced standards, we have been able to ensure that the cut-scores related to age for the ECDI2030 are based on performance standards set by global experts in the ECD field for defining on and off track development.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Standards of early childhood development (ECD) are needed to determine whether children living in different contexts are developmentally on track. The Early Childhood Development Index 2030 (ECDI2030) is a population-level measure intended to be used in household surveys to collect globally comparable data on one of the indicators chosen to monitor progress toward target 4.2 of the Sustainable Development Goals: The proportion of children aged 24-59 months who are developmentally on track in health, learning and psychosocial well-being.
METHODS METHODS
To define performance cut-scores for the ECDI2030 we followed a criterion-referenced standard setting exercise using the modified Angoff method. The exercise gauged the expectations from 15 global experts in ECD and was informed by representative population data collected in Mexico and the State of Palestine. The final calibrated age-specific performance cut-scores were applied to these data to estimate the proportion of children developmentally on track, disaggregated by background characteristics, including the child's sex and attendance to early childhood education.
RESULTS RESULTS
Through a process of standard setting, we generated robust performance standards for the ECDI2030 by establishing five age-specific cut-scores to identify children as developmentally on track.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
This paper demonstrated how the standard setting methodology, typically applied to measures in the health and education fields, could be applied to a measure of child development. By creating robust criterion-referenced standards, we have been able to ensure that the cut-scores related to age for the ECDI2030 are based on performance standards set by global experts in the ECD field for defining on and off track development.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38087377
doi: 10.1186/s41043-023-00483-2
pii: 10.1186/s41043-023-00483-2
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

140

Informations de copyright

© 2023. The Author(s).

Références

Lancet. 2007 Jan 6;369(9555):60-70
pubmed: 17208643
Acta Paediatr. 2019 Jun;108(6):1074-1086
pubmed: 30472813
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2021 Nov 20;18(22):
pubmed: 34831937

Auteurs

Nicole Petrowski (N)

UNICEF, Data and Analytics Section, 3 UN Plaza, New York, NY, 10017, USA. npetrowski@unicef.org.

Filipa de Castro (F)

Formerly with UNICEF, Data and Analytics Section, 3 UN Plaza, New York, NY, 10017, USA.

Susan Davis-Becker (S)

ACS Ventures, 11035 Lavender Hill Drive #160-433, Las Vegas, NV, 89135, USA.

Melissa Gladstone (M)

Department of Women and Children's Health, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, University of Liverpool, Pembroke Place, Liverpool, L3 5QA, UK.

Claudia Regina Lindgren Alves (CR)

Department of Pediatrics, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais/School of Medicine, Minas Gerais, Brazil.

Yvonne Becher (Y)

The Child Development Centre, 4/F Prime Mansion, 183-187 Johnston Road, Wan Chai, Hong Kong.

Jennifer Grisham (J)

Early Childhood Laboratory, University of Kentucky, 621 S. Limestone, Lexington, KY, 40506-0657, USA.

Kirsten Donald (K)

Division of Developmental Pediatrics, Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital and Neuroscience Institute, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.

Meta van den Heuvel (M)

Hospital for Sick Children, 555 University Ave, Toronto, ON, M5G 1X8, Canada.

Gwendoline Kandawasvika (G)

Primary Health Sciences Department, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Zimbabwe, Mt Pleasant, P.O. Box MP167, Harare, Zimbabwe.

Shazia Maqbool (S)

Developmental-Behavioral Pediatrics Department, The Children's Hospital and Institute of Child Health, Lahore, Pakistan.

Fahmida Tofail (F)

International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, GPO Box 128, Dhaka, 1000, Bangladesh.

Tao Xin (T)

National Assessment Center for Education Quality, Ministry of Education, Beijing, China.

Pia Zeinoun (P)

Embrace NGO, Beirut, Lebanon.

Claudia Cappa (C)

UNICEF, Data and Analytics Section, 3 UN Plaza, New York, NY, 10017, USA.

Classifications MeSH