ParentChild+

About This Program

Target Population: Families with two- and three-year-old children (families may enter the program with children as young as 16-months) who face multiple obstacles to educational and economic success

For children/adolescents ages: 1 – 4

For parents/caregivers of children ages: 1 – 4

Program Overview

ParentChild+, an early childhood program, is designed to promote parent-child interaction and positive parenting to enhance children's cognitive and social-emotional development. The program specifically works with families who live in historically marginalized communities that consistently experience housing and food insecurity and low-quality education and health care services. These families are often isolated and speak home languages other than English. The program focuses on partnering with these families to prepare their children for academic success through regular, frequent home visiting. Twice weekly home visits are designed to strengthen parent-child interaction, the conversation, reading, and play that are critical to early childhood development and well-being. Each week, early learning specialists (ELSs; i.e., home visitors) bring a new book or educational toy that remains with the families permanently. Using the book or toy, the ELSs engages with the parents and children together in reading, conversation, and play activities that are designed to stimulate quality interaction, support age-appropriate developmental expectations, enhance language and learning at home, and support parents in their role as their child’s first and most important teacher.

Program Goals

The goals of ParentChild+ are:

  • Understand their child's healthy social-emotional development
  • Support secure attachment with their child
  • Understand the ways to support the language development skills essential for school readiness
  • Support and enhance a positive learning environment
  • Help their child build school readiness skills
  • Increase quality and quantity of parent-child verbal and nonverbal interaction
  • Increase prosocial behavior in their child
  • Learn additional skills to strengthen their family
  • Increase their child's language and preliteracy skills
  • Increase successful and positive parenting
  • Increase their family’s connection to community services and resources
  • Help identify the next educational step for their child
  • Logic Model

    View the Logic Model for ParentChild+.

    Essential Components

    The essential components of ParentChild+ include:

    • Program Services:
      • Provide families with two- and three-year-old children with regular, frequent home visits – twice a week for 46 weeks..
      • Provide families with two- and three-year-old children with high quality books and toys weekly.
      • Engage parents and their two- and three-year-old children in play, playful reading, and conversation.
      • Support families in accessing community services and resources.
    • Four major components define the ParentChild+ curriculum. The curriculum is is shared with the parents/primary caregivers by Early Learning Specialists (ELSs) during home visits.
      • Verbal Interaction Techniques:
        • Focuses on nurturing the child's intellectual growth through conversation with the parents/primary caregiver.
        • Promotes parent-child verbal interaction around the books and toys.
        • Utilizes a guide sheet that accompanies each book and toy to provide a variety of examples of playful activities, including reading and conversation techniques for ELSs and participants:
          • Contains a one- to two-page summary of the intellectually stimulating components of the program’s hidden curriculum, which is modeled by the ELS – not directly taught to the parents.
          • Contains reading, conversation, and/or play activities.
          • Accompanies the corresponding book or toy when it is given to the program participant by the ELS.
      • Positive Parenting Behavior:
        • Focuses on twenty items of positive parenting behavior modeled by the ELS throughout the two 23-week home cycles including:
          • Responding verbally to the child's verbal or nonverbal requests for attention
          • Verbalizing affection toward the child
          • Verbalizing child expectations in a clear manner
      • Social–Emotional Development:
        • Focuses on helping children develop their social relationships as they pertain to:
          • Their inner selves
          • The world of work, play, and ideas
          • Utilizes the practice of positive parenting to foster children's social–emotional competence.
      • Curriculum Materials (Books and Toys):
        • Twelve books and eleven toys distributed to the families
        • High quality:
          • Sturdy
          • Attractive
          • Cognitively stimulating at a variety of levels
        • Given to family to keep
        • Provide a focus for both the child and parent by sparking ongoing verbal interaction.
    • Early Learning Specialists (Home Visitors):
      • Primarily paid paraprofessionals
      • A cultural, linguistic, and community match with families participating in the program
      • Possibly former program parent-participants
      • Required initial 16-hour training workshop
      • Required weekly ELSs supervisory meetings with their site Coordinator
      • Trained to focus on coaching and supporting parents on how to embed the curriculum in their home environment while playing, reading, and talking with their children
      • Learn the play techniques for each new book or toy by role-playing and reviewing the guide sheets in the training and weekly staff meetings
      • One-on-one and group support and counsel available for the issues they encounter in home visits
    • Supervision (Coordinators):
      • Responsible for the effective implementation of the ParentChild+ replication site
      • Typically, has experience in a field closely aligned with the program, such as:
        • Early childhood or parenting education
        • Social work
        • Psychology
      • Must be knowledgeable and caring about interpersonal behavior, values, reflective supervision, equity issues, and the perspectives and values of the families with whom they are working
      • Pulls together the key elements of the program – ELSs, families, curriculum/curricular materials– to form a smoothly working and effective whole

    Program Delivery

    Child/Adolescent Services

    ParentChild+ directly provides services to children/adolescents and addresses the following:

    • Families living in historically marginalized communities that consistently experience housing and food insecurity and low-quality education and health care services; often isolated and speak home languages other than English

    Parent/Caregiver Services

    ParentChild+ directly provides services to parents/caregivers and addresses the following:

    • Lack of verbal and nonverbal interaction with child, lack of appropriate parental expectations based on developmental level of child, lack of engagement in children’s learning, experience barriers to school readiness and accessing community resources

    Recommended Intensity:

    Twice a week for 30 minutes each visit

    Recommended Duration:

    Two 23-week cycles (can be delivered over two "school" year schedules or continuously). The model requires that at least 46 weeks/92 visits are offered to the family.

    Delivery Settings

    This program is typically conducted in a(n):

    • Adoptive Home
    • Birth Family Home

    Homework

    This program does not include a homework component.

    Languages

    ParentChild+ has materials available in a language other than English:

    Spanish

    For information on which materials are available in this language, please check on the program's website or contact the program representative (contact information is listed at the bottom of this page).

    Resources Needed to Run Program

    The typical resources for implementing the program are:

    • Site Coordinator (staff person who is trained to oversee the replication site, must have one Coordinator per 50-65 families)
    • Early Learning Specialists (community-based staff who are trained to do home visits, a full-time ELS can visit 12-15 families)
    • Replication agreement with the National Center
    • New books and toys for each family (12 books and 11 toys per family for each 23-week program cycle)

    Manuals and Training

    Prerequisite/Minimum Provider Qualifications

    Program Coordinators are responsible for the effective implementation of the replication site. The coordinator typically has experience in a field closely aligned with the program, such as early childhood or parenting education, social work, or psychology. The coordinator must be knowledgeable and caring about interpersonal behavior, reflective supervision, and the values, perspectives, and attitudes of the families with whom they are working.

    Early Learning Specialists (ELSs) are paid community-based employees. They must be a cultural, linguistic, and community match with the families in the program, and many are former program parent-participants. All ELSs are trained in an initial minimum sixteen-hour training workshop and through weekly ELS training and supervision meetings throughout the year. They are trained not to be social workers or teachers, but to focus on facilitating with parents how to utilize the curriculum while playing, reading, and talking with their children. They are trained to observe, reflect, and encourage parent-child interactions that are child-led and strengths-based. In the weekly meetings led by the Site Coordinator, they work on the Verbal Interaction Techniques for each new book or toy, by role-playing and reviewing the Guide Sheets. They also get and give support and counsel on issues they encounter during home visits.

    Manual Information

    There is a manual that describes how to deliver this program.

    Program Manual(s)

    There are manuals that describe how to implement this program. An online learning management system with extensive training and professional development resources, and live virtual and in-person training is also available for this program. All manuals and training resources are available when an agency becomes a replication site. Information is available through the Training Contact.

    Training Information

    There is training available for this program.

    Training Contact:
    • Michele Morrison, Training and Program Support Director
      phone: (516) 883-7480
    Training Type/Location:

    Training institutes are held in-person or virtually by the National Center, and in some cases through our state offices, typically several times a year. Online supplemental and follow-up training is available throughout the year.

    Number of days/hours:

    In-person training is typically 3 days, 7-8 hours/day; and virtual training is 6 half-days, 4 hour/day. Follow-up training is provided 3-6 months after an agency begins to replicate the model. It is also typically offered at least annually in conjunction with the annual national conference in May. Continuous learning is provided online through ParentChild+ learning platform.

    Implementation Information

    Pre-Implementation Materials

    There are pre-implementation materials to measure organizational or provider readiness for ParentChild+ as listed below:

    • Site Start-up Packet
    • Replication agreement
    • Proposed plan document to be completed by local partner agency
    • Administrative forms

    Formal Support for Implementation

    There is formal support available for implementation of ParentChild+ as listed below:

    Formal implementation support is provided by the National Center's Training and Program Support department and by State Program Directors; Support for data collection and management is provided by the Research and Evaluation department; and support with public and private fund development and sustainability planning is provided by the State Program Directors and the National Center's Development Department.

    Fidelity Measures

    There are fidelity measures for ParentChild+ as listed below:

    The methods of assessing fidelity include regular review of site data entered into DAISY (ParentChild+'s online management information system, which includes demographic, implementation, and assessment data); regular site visits/telephone check-ins by state directors and/or national staff; and a regular comprehensive site certification process, which includes site visits and reviews (including structured observation, home visit video coding, semi-structured interviews and data analysis), a self-report checklist describing implementation of the key elements of program, and feedback collected from multiple stakeholders.

    Fidelity Measure Requirements:

    Fidelity measures are required to be used as part of program implementation.

    Established Psychometrics:

    Astuto, J., Gjicali, K., & Medellin, C. (2016). Validity psychometrics of the Parent and Child Together (PACT) and the Child Behavior Traits (CBT).

    Levenstein, P. (1979). The Parent-Child Network. In A. Simmons-Martin & D. K. Calvert, (Eds.), Parent-infant intervention: Communication disorders. Grune & Stratton, Inc.

    Implementation Guides or Manuals

    There are implementation guides or manuals for ParentChild+ as listed below:

    The program provides a complete set of implementation guides for the program – including an administrative implementation manual, a site coordinator manual, an ELS manual, and a guide to using the management information system.

    Implementation Cost

    There have been studies of the costs of implementing ParentChild+ which are listed below:

    • Bartik, T. J. (2008). The economic development effects of early childhood programs. Report submitted to Partnership for American’s Economic Success. https://research.upjohn.org/reports/28
    • Hevesi, A. G. (2001). Building foundations: Supporting parental involvement in a child’s first years. A report from the City of New York Office of the Comptroller.

    Research on How to Implement the Program

    Research has been conducted on how to implement ParentChild+ as listed below:

    Madden, J., Levenstein, P., & Levenstein, S. (1976). Longitudinal IQ outcomes of the Mother-Child Home Program. Child Development, 47, 1015-1025.

    Relevant Published, Peer-Reviewed Research

    Child Welfare Outcome: Child/Family Well-Being

    Madden, J., O'Hara, J., & Levenstein, P. (1984). Home again: Effects of the Mother Child Home Program on mother and child. Child Development, 55,(2), 636–647. https://doi.org/10.2307/1129975

    Type of Study: Randomized controlled trial
    Number of Participants: 166

    Population:

    • Age — 21–33 months
    • Race/Ethnicity — 88% African American
    • Gender — Not specified
    • Status — Participants were referred by public and private agencies, individuals and identified from school census lists for risk factors.

    Location/Institution: New York City

    Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
    The purpose of the study was to establish the effectiveness of Mother-Child Home Program (MCHP) [now called ParentChild+]. Participants were randomly assigned to a control group or to a comparison group. Three cohorts were compared to no-treatment controls, while the fourth was compared to a condition where materials were supplied but not home visits. Measures utilized include the Cattell Developmental and Intelligence Scale, Child Behavior Traits Measure, the Stanford Binet Intelligence Test, the Reading and Arithmetic Scales of the Wide Range Achievement Test, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT), and the Maternal Interactive Behavior Record. Results indicate that short-term MCHP effects included higher levels of desirable behaviors in maternal interactions and, in one cohort, higher scores on the Stanford Binet Intelligence Test and the program-developed achievement test. There was no effect on IQ when the materials-only group was compared to the MCHP group. There were no effects in any cohort at 3-year follow-up, although IQ levels were near national norms in all groups. Limitations include no significant differences were found between the control group and the comparison group, limited generalizability due to ethnicity, and the increased availability of preschool groups may have diluted program effects.

    Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: 3 years.

    Scarr, S., & McCartney, K. (1988). Far from home: An experimental evaluation of the Mother-Child Home Program in Bermuda. Child Development, 59(3), 531–543. https://doi.org/10.2307/1130555

    Type of Study: Randomized controlled trial
    Number of Participants: 125 families

    Population:

    • Age — 2 years
    • Race/Ethnicity — 100% Bermudian
    • Gender — Not specified
    • Status — Participants were volunteers recruited through birth records and advertising.

    Location/Institution: Bermuda

    Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
    The purpose of the study was to examine the effectiveness of the Mother-Child Home Program (MCHP) [now called ParentChild+]. Participants were randomly assigned to the MCHP or to a control group. Measures utilized include the Stanford Binet Test of Intelligence, the Bayley Scale of Mental Development, the Infant Behavior Record, and the Cain-Levine Social Competency Scale. Results indicate that on average children in Bermuda scored above United States norms on cognitive tests and are functioning well in the preschool period. Only two child outcomes were significant at the follow-up, MCHP children performed better at a designated sorting task and were rated higher on communication skills by their mothers. Limitations include children possibility being familiar with the intervention.

    Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: 2 years.

    Levenstein, P., Levenstein, S., Shiminski, J. A., & Stolzberg, J. E. (1998). Long-term impact of a verbal interaction program for at-risk toddlers: An exploratory study of high school outcomes in a replication of the Mother-Child Home Program. Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 19(2), 267–285. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0193-3973(99)80040-9

    Type of Study: Randomized controlled trial
    Number of Participants: 123 young adults

    Population:

    • Age — 17–24 years
    • Race/Ethnicity — Not specified
    • Gender — Not specified
    • Status — Participants were families of students attending Title One schools.

    Location/Institution: Pittsfield, MA

    Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
    The purpose of the study was to examine the effectiveness of the Mother-Child Home Program (MCHP) [now called ParentChild+]. Participants were randomly assigned to the MCHP or to a control group. Young adults who had been in five yearly cohorts of at-risk toddlers eligible for a replication of the MCHP, were studied 16 to 20 years later for their high school performance. Measures utilized include the Child’s Behavior Traits, Parent and Child Together, and Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT). Results indicate that subjects who had completed the Pittsfield Parent-Child Home Program, a MCHP program replication, as toddlers were significantly less likely than randomized controls to drop out of school and more likely to have graduated. On an intention-to-treat basis, 76.9% of all subjects who enrolled in the program and 53.9% of controls graduated from high school. The dropout rate of program enrollees was lower than the mean for all Pittsfield students, while program completers matched the national graduation rate for middle-income students. Limitations include high attrition rate, the small number of controls, the failure of many differences to reach statistical significance, and the dearth of demographic and pre-graduation scholastic data on the study subjects.

    Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: 16–20 years.

    Allen, L., Sethi, A., & Astuto, J. (2007). An evaluation of graduates of a toddlerhood home visiting program at kindergarten age. NHSA Dialog, 10(1), 36–57. https://doi.org/10.1080/15240750701301811

    Type of Study: Nonrandomized comparison group
    Number of Participants: 116

    Population:

    • Age — Kindergarten (approximately 4–6 years)
    • Race/Ethnicity — Intervention: 71% Latino, 14% Other, 10% African American, and 5% Caucasian; Comparison Group: 33% Latino, 29% African American, 27% Caucasian, and 12% Other
    • Gender — Not specified
    • Status — Participants resided in areas that are increasingly diverse and low-income.

    Location/Institution: Nassau and Suffolk Counties, New York

    Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
    The purpose of the study was to evaluate whether graduates of The Parent Child Home Program (PCHP) [now called ParentChild+] were performing similarly to their community peers. Participants who graduated from PCHP were compared to children who had not participated in PCHP as a toddler but were in the same Kindergarten classrooms. Measures utilized include the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT), the Test of Early Reading Ability (TERA), the Academic Rating Scale, the Family and Child Experiences Survey (FACES), the Kochanska Inhibitory Control Battery, the Social Skills Rating Scale, and the Family Involvement Questionnaire, with supplemental questions regarding parental support for children’s learning. Results indicate that although the PCHP children went into the program at much higher risk of being unprepared for school, when assessed in kindergarten they showed no differences from the comparison group on social emotional skills or early literacy skills. However, some differences were noted on two standardized tests of verbal and literacy skill, which may be accounted for by the higher number of Latino children in the intervention group. Parents in the intervention group did not differ from the comparison group on likelihood to meet with teachers. However, they were less likely to volunteer at school and to provide home-based activities for children’s learning. Limitations include nonrandomization of participants and small sample size.

    Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: 2–3 years

    Mann, V. (2014). Spanish-language home visitation to disadvantaged Latino preschoolers: A means of promoting language development and English school readiness. Creative Education, 5(6), 411–426. https://doi.org/10.4236/ce.2014.56051

    Type of Study: Pretest–posttest study with a nonequivalent control group (Quasi-experimental)
    Number of Participants: 537

    Population:

    • Age — 12–59 months
    • Race/Ethnicity — 100% Hispanic
    • Gender — Not specified
    • Status — Participants were children who were enrolled in the HABLA program as HABLA graduates and a group of untreated peers, all of whom had attended a state preschool program and were currently enrolled in a public school kindergarten.

    Location/Institution: Northwest region of the United States

    Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
    The purpose of the study was to report five years of a school readiness intervention called “HABLA” (Home Based Activities Building Language Acquisition), a Spanish-version of the Parent Child Home Program (PCHP) [now called ParentChild+], designed to increase and enrich speech and literacy activities in the homes of economically and educationally disadvantaged Latino families with children between the age of 2 and 4. Participants were children who were enrolled in the PCHP program as well as comparison children from the same communities which were served by the program. Measures utilized include the Preschool Language Scale (PLS-3). Results indicate that participants had significantly improved their levels of oral Spanish skill and scored much higher than a comparison group of non-treated. A subset of graduates of the two-year program was tested as kindergarteners; they showed a continued advantage over a comparison group of 18 peers who had not received the intervention. For the graduates, both their Spanish PLS-3 scores and English PLS-4 scores were significantly higher, and their parents reported a continued effort to provide literacy experiences at home. The HABLA participants also showed a clear advantage for an English language test of phonological awareness, one of the strongest predictors of school success. Limitations include the nonrandomization of participants, high attrition, and lack of follow-up.

    Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: None.

    Manz, P. H., Bracaliello, C. B., Pressimone, V. J., Eisenberg, R. A., Gernhart, A. C., Fu, Q., & Zuniga, C. (2016). Toddlers' expressive vocabulary outcomes after one year of Parent-Child Home Program services. Early Child Development and Care, 186(2), 229–248. https://doi.org/10.1080/03004430.2015.1025228

    Type of Study: Pretest–posttest study with a nonequivalent control group (Quasi-experimental)
    Number of Participants: 316

    Population:

    • Age — Adults: Mean=29.24 years; Children: Mean=29.12 months (approximately 2.4 years)
    • Race/Ethnicity — Adults: Not specified; Children: 67% Latino, 27% African American, 4% Biracial , and 2% Caucasian
    • Gender — Adults: Not specified; Children: 60% Female
    • Status — Participants were children who were enrolled in the ParentChild+ program as well as comparison children from the same communities which were served by the program.

    Location/Institution: Northwest region of the United States

    Summary: (To include basic study design, measures, results, and notable limitations)
    The purpose of the study was to examine expressive vocabulary outcomes for Parent–Child Home Program (PCHP) [now called ParentChild+] toddlers, after one year of home-visiting services. Participants were children who were enrolled in the PCHP program as well as comparison children from the same communities which were served by the program. Measures utilized include the child Expressive One-Word Picture Vocabulary Test – Revised (EOWPVT-R). Results indicate that PCHP children showed moderately large improvements in their expressive vocabulary when compared to peers of similar age and socio-economic backgrounds. Limitations include the nonrandomization of participants, psychometric limitations of the EOWPVT-R, and lack of follow-up.

    Length of controlled postintervention follow-up: None.

    Additional References

    Allen, L., & Sethi, A. (2004). Bridging the gap between poor and privileged: How the Parent-Child Home Program uses books and toys to help poor toddlers succeed in kindergarten and beyond. America Educator, 28(2), 34-56. https://www.aft.org/periodical/american-educator/summer-2004/bridging-gap-between-poor-and-privileged

    Kamerman, S. B., & Kahn, A. J. (1995). Starting right. Oxford University Press.

    McGonigel, M. (2005). Replication in Practice: Lessons from five lead agencies. Zero to Three, 25(5), 9-16. https://www.mothersmattercentre.ca/wp-content/articles/Replication.pdf

    Contact Information

    Cesar Zuniga, MA
    Agency/Affiliation: ParentChild+, Inc.
    Website: www.parentchildplus.org
    Email:
    Phone: (516) 883-7480
    Fax: (516) 883-7481

    Date Research Evidence Last Reviewed by CEBC: January 2023

    Date Program Content Last Reviewed by Program Staff: April 2022

    Date Program Originally Loaded onto CEBC: April 2008