You need proof that a child growing up with quality care and a quality social/cultural environment is more likely to be able to function and "succeed" in life as an adult?
Yes - I've seen studies that show things like "quality education" don't really hold up under close inspection (for eg. when you control for student performance before college difference between elite colleges and standard ones disappears).
I would be interested how research defines this "high quality social/cultural environments" and how it controls for factors such as genetics, family cultural and financial background, etc. Separated twin studies would probably be ideal (but I'm not an expert in the field).
It's not readily apparent that increasing the amount of children per staff member will significantly impact a child's ability to "succeed" in life as an adult.
I'm not sure how we expect a 1:6 ratio to be "cheap", even before factoring in costs like real estate.
moonchrome|10 years ago
I would be interested how research defines this "high quality social/cultural environments" and how it controls for factors such as genetics, family cultural and financial background, etc. Separated twin studies would probably be ideal (but I'm not an expert in the field).
d2xdy2|10 years ago
protomyth|10 years ago
Eridrus|10 years ago
I'm not sure how we expect a 1:6 ratio to be "cheap", even before factoring in costs like real estate.
protomyth|10 years ago