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Completed RESEARCH GRANT UKRI Gateway to Research

Improving health and development through play - Evaluation of a comprehensive ECCE programme at scale in Ghana

£10.55M GBP

Funder Medical Research Council
Recipient Organization Institute for Fiscal Studies
Country United Kingdom
Start Date Mar 31, 2022
End Date Sep 29, 2022
Duration 182 days
Number of Grantees 7
Roles Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator; Award Holder
Data Source UKRI Gateway to Research
Grant ID MR/V035312/1
Grant Description

Children who receive quality ECCE are proven to be healthier, do better and stay longer in school, and thereby have better economic trajectories in adult life. Improving ECCE is therefore critical, especially in remote and vulnerable areas, such as northern Ghana, where most families live on less than US$2 per day, 20% of children under the age of 5 are stunted and 39% 3-4-years olds are off-track cognitively.

Previous research by members of this research team has shown that an intervention by the NGO Lively Minds (LMNGO), designed to combat the twin problem of low kindergarten quality and poor parenting practices/mindsets, significantly improved children's health, cognitive skills and socio-emotional development in remote, poor, rural areas of northern Ghana. These promising findings were a key driver of the decision by the Ministry of Education (MoE) to work with LMNGO to scale up the programme in 60 of Ghana's 228 districts to reach 4,000 pre-schools and up to 1.3 million children over the next four years.

However, from previous studies we know that programmes that are impactful at smaller scale may not maintain their effectiveness once adapted for and implemented at the scale necessary to reach those in need of them. In this project we, therefore, aim to find out whether the promising effect of the Lively Minds programme can be sustained as coverage is expanded and ownership of the programme is handed from LMNGO to the MoE.

We will also study the causal pathway between the programme and child developmental outcomes. Analysis of the efficacy trial results conducted by this research team revealed some of these pathways (especially for impacts on socio-emotional development), drivers of the substantial health effects that were identified remain unexplained.

To achieve these research aims, we have brought together a multidisciplinary research team, consisting of in-country and international economists, epidemiologists, WASH experts and developmental psychologists. Working in close partnership with LMNGO and the three ministries which oversee ECCE provision in Ghana (MoE, Ministry of Health and Ministry of Gender, Children and Social Protection) this team will embed a randomised controlled trial in the scale-up, collecting data on child development and pathways through which the Lively Minds programme could affect it after 4 terms of exposure. We will also collect routine data in schools to assess how well the programme is being implemented.

The Lively Minds programme is unusual. ECCE programs are often one-dimensional, targeting either parents or pre-schools, and/or focusing on one area of child development. LMNGO developed a hybrid ECCE program, designed with scalability in mind, that simultaneously improves the home and pre-school environments, as well as children's health alongside cognitive and socio-emotional development at a projected cost of $7 per child per year when scaled, using only locally available resources and infrastructure and empowering marginalised and isolated mothers in rural communities.

From starting in a few villages in Ghana and Uganda ten years ago it will now be taken over by the government of Ghana and will reach over a million children in the next 5-years. We will evaluate whether it maintains its effectiveness through this process of substantial scaling and transmission of ownership and whether there are ways in which it could be improved.

This will first and foremost provide important evidence for the MoE on effectiveness of its policies. However, it will also help the wider community of stakeholders in LMICs seeking cost-effective, innovative, cross-sectoral and scalable ways to intervene in order to meet Sustainable Development Goals 3 and 4 ensuring that all children, including those in the most marginalised and vulnerable populations, receive nurturing care and opportunities for early learning.

All Grantees

University of Pennsylvania; Institute for Fiscal Studies; University of Ghana; London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine; Yale University; The University of Manchester

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