No Simple Answer: Critique of the Follow Through Evaluation
- 1 July 1978
- journal article
- Published by Harvard Education Publishing Group in Harvard Educational Review
- Vol. 48 (2) , 128-160
- https://doi.org/10.17763/haer.48.2.j2167r4594027x87
Abstract
Follow Through has been the largest and most expensive federal educational experiment in this country's history. Conceived in 1967 as an extension of Head Start, Follow Through was designed as a service program to improve the schooling of disadvantaged children in the early elementary grades. Before it was under way,however, an expected $120 million appropriation was slashed to only $15 milion for the first year. A decision was then made by the U.S. Office of Education to convert the program into a planned variation experiment, which systematically would compare pupils enrolled in different models of early childhood education—the Follow Through models—to each other and to pupils from non-Follow Through classes.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Stability and Sex Differences on the Coopersmith Self-Esteem Inventory for Students in Grades Two to TwelvePsychological Reports, 1977
- An Investigation of Children’s Concept of Self-Responsibility For Their School LearningAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1976