html5-img
1 / 25

METRO BABY PROJECT

METRO BABY PROJECT. New York University Psychology Department Dr. Catherine Tamis-LeMonda Eden Lipke (HCS 2009) Farzana Ahmed (HCS 2009) Lorena Nicol (HCS 2008). OVERVIEW of TALK. Metro baby project Our research activities. Metro baby project. GOAL.

pakuna
Download Presentation

METRO BABY PROJECT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. METRO BABY PROJECT New York University Psychology Department Dr. Catherine Tamis-LeMonda Eden Lipke (HCS 2009) Farzana Ahmed (HCS 2009) Lorena Nicol (HCS 2008)

  2. OVERVIEW of TALK • Metro baby project • Our research activities

  3. Metro baby project

  4. GOAL • families, schools, peers, work, and the media on development of young children • parents’ views and practices from the first days of infants’ lives • culture on infants’ early learning, development, and school readiness. To understand the influence of…

  5. BACKGROUND • Started in 2004 • Mothers and their newborns were recruited from Bellevue Hospital, Harlem Hospital, and Allen Pavillion • Initial sample: 324 families • African American • Dominican • Mexican

  6. TIMELINE

  7. Our research activities: • Phone interview • Daily routine diary • Coding • Data entry into SPSS • Future plans

  8. Our research activities: • Phone interview • Daily routine diary • Coding • Data entry into SPSS • Future plans

  9. PHONE INTERVIEW • Data is collected via a phone interview: • Parenting beliefs (what parents think) • Parenting practices (what parents do) • Child characteristics (gender, temperament) • Child experiences • Parent experiences • Finances

  10. Our research activities: • Phone interview • Daily routine diary • Coding • Data entry into SPSS • Future plans

  11. DAILY ROUTINES • Mothers are interviewed for a detailed account of a typical day with her child • Mothers are asked to specify: • the events of the day • who was present • location • duration • who was involved

  12. DAILY ROUTINES DIARY

  13. Our research activities: • Phone interview • Daily routine diary • Coding • Data entry into SPSS • Future plans

  14. CODING • Daily routine diary is coded • Each event is identified as an “episode,” such as: • Breast feed • Diaper change • Holding • Hand games • Bath

  15. CODING, cont. • Major categories for episodes: • Caregiving • Play with toys • Play without toys • Reading books • Literacy activities • TV watching • Other media • Household chores • Child focused outings • Parent/other related outings • Family/community events • Organized activity • Informal child care • Visits

  16. CODING SHEET • The times for each episode were computed and written onto a code sheet

  17. SAMPLE CODING SHEET

  18. Our research activities: • Phone interview • Daily routine diary • Coding • Data entry into SPSS • Future plans

  19. Data entry into SPSS • Statistical Package for the Social Sciences • Software used to analyze data collected from diaries • Focus: time distribution • Condenses wide range of information into statistics, trends

  20. Our research activities: • Phone interview • Daily routine diary • Coding • SPSS • Future plans

  21. FUTURE PLANS • Complete SPSS data entry and checking • Identify trends in statistical results • Differences between cultures • Breakdown of time spent in different types of activities • Child network (who engages in activities) • Move on to code 6 month diaries

  22. BIBLIOGRAPHY • Tamis-LeMonda, C. S., Shannon, J. D., Cabrera, N. J., & Lamb, M.E. (2004). “Fathers and Mothers at Play with their 2- and 3-Year-Olds: Contributions to Language and Cognitive Development”, Child Development. • Guillette, Elizabeth A. "Examining Childhood Development in Contaminated Urban Settings." Environmental Health Perspectives. Vol 108. June 2008, pg. 389-393. 6 Aug 2009. • Chuang, Susan S, and Robert P. Moreno. On New Shores: Understanding Immigrant Fathers in North America. 1st ed. Rowman & Littlefield, 2008. • Bremner, Gavin, and Alan Fogel. Blackwell Handbook of Infant Development. Oxford, UK: Wiley-Blackwell, March 5, 2004.

  23. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS • Professor Catherine Tamis-Lemonda • Ryann McNeil and Emily Ho (Co-mentors) • NYU staff and CRCDE • Dr. Sat Bhattacharya • Professor Ross • HCS staff • Our audience

  24. THANK YOU!

  25. Questions?

More Related