Journal Design Emerald Editorial
African Community Development (Interdisciplinary - Social/Policy) | 10 July 2013

Cognitive Readiness and the Slum Environment

Assessing the Efficacy of Community-Based Early Childhood Development Centres in Addis Ababa
T, e, w, o, d, r, o, s, G, e, b, r, e, m, e, d, h, i, n, ,, S, e, l, a, m, a, w, i, t, T, e, s, f, a, y, e, ,, M, e, k, d, e, s, A, b, e, b, e
Cognitive ReadinessECD CentresUrban SlumsEthiopia
Quantifies the impact of community-based ECD centres in an African slum context.
Uses a locally validated cognitive assessment tool with a stratified sample of 420 children.
Finds a significant positive association between centre attendance and cognitive scores.
Controls for key confounding factors including parental education and household assets.

Abstract

Children in urban slums face significant environmental risks that can impede cognitive development prior to formal schooling. Community-based early childhood development (ECD) centres have emerged as a key intervention in such settings, yet robust evidence of their efficacy in the East African context remains limited. This study assesses the impact of community-based ECD centres on the cognitive readiness scores of preschool-aged children residing in the slums of Addis Ababa. It aims to determine the association between centre attendance and cognitive outcomes, controlling for key household and environmental factors. A cross-sectional survey was administered to caregivers of children aged 4-6 years. A stratified random sample was drawn from households in three major slum areas, yielding 420 participants. Cognitive readiness was measured using a validated, culturally adapted assessment tool. Data were analysed using multivariate regression to isolate the effect of ECD centre attendance. Attendance at a community-based ECD centre was significantly associated with higher cognitive readiness scores. Children who attended a centre for at least one year scored, on average, 17 percentage points higher on the assessment than non-attending peers, after controlling for parental education and household assets. Community-based ECD centres can effectively enhance cognitive readiness in high-risk slum environments, potentially mitigating developmental delays caused by poverty and inadequate stimulation. Policy should prioritise sustainable funding and quality assurance for community-based ECD programmes in informal settlements. Further research should investigate longitudinal impacts and the specific programme characteristics that drive effectiveness. cognitive readiness, early childhood development, slums, community-based interventions, Ethiopia, preschool education This study provides novel, quantitative evidence on the efficacy of a community-driven ECD model in an African slum context, utilising a locally validated cognitive assessment to generate policy-relevant findings.