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Reproducibility package for Do Psychosocial Stimulation, Parental Distress and Early Childhood Education Enrollment Show Different Associations with Early Childhood Development Outcomes for Boys and Girls? Findings from a Phone Survey in Pakistan

2024
Get Reproducibility Package
Reference ID
RR_PAK_2024_167
DOI
https://doi.org/ https://doi.org/10.60572/zacg-e211
Author(s)
Emily Franchett, Amer Hasan, Elizabeth Hentschel, Mahreen Tahir-Chowdhry, Heather Tomlinson, Aisha Yousafzai, Mina Zamand
Collections
World Bank Policy Research Working Papers
Metadata
JSON
Created on
Jul 18, 2024
Last modified
May 15, 2025
  • Project Description
  • Downloads
  • Overview
  • Reproducibility Package
  • Description
  • Scope and coverage
  • Disclaimer
  • Access and rights
  • Contacts
  • Information on metadata
  • Citation
  • Overview

    Abstract

    This study examined whether psychosocial stimulation, parental distress, and enrollment in pre- primary education had different associations with early child development outcomes for boys and girls in Pakistan. Using data from a nationally representative phone survey in Pakistan, it assessed these relationships for two cohorts of children – those aged 0-35 months and those aged 36-72 months. The study found that among very young children (0-35 months), lower parental distress and higher psychosocial stimulation were strongly associated with better child development for both boys and girls. Girls were more sensitive to higher levels of parental distress and lower levels of psychosocial stimulation than boys. On average girls in the sample fared worse compared to boys in their developmental outcomes in the context of low levels of stimulation and high levels of parental distress. Among the older age cohort (36-72 months), lower psychosocial stimulation and higher parental distress were each similarly associated with lower child development outcomes, regardless of child gender. Access to early childhood education was associated with better child development outcomes for both genders. The results confirm existing evidence that early learning opportunities in the first 6 years of life are important supports for promoting early child development for all children and suggest that girls aged 0-35 months in this sample may be uniquely sensitive to psychosocial stimulation and parental distress.

    Reproducibility Package

    Scripts
    Readme Get Reproducibility Package
    Link: https://reproducibility.worldbank.org/index.php/catalog/167/download/461/README.pdf
    Reproducibility package (code) for Do Psychosocial Stimulation, Parental Distress and Early Childhood Education Enrollment Show Different Associations with Early Childhood Development Outcomes for Boys and Girls? Findings from a Phone Survey in Pakistan
    Title
    Reproducibility package (code) for Do Psychosocial Stimulation, Parental Distress and Early Childhood Education Enrollment Show Different Associations with Early Childhood Development Outcomes for Boys and Girls? Findings from a Phone Survey in Pakistan
    Dependencies
    All dependencies are stored in the ado folder.
    Instructions
    See README in the reproducibility package.
    Notes
    Computational reproducibility verified by Development Impact (DIME) Analytics team, World Bank
    Source code repository
    Repository name URI
    Reproducible Research Repository (World Bank) https://reproducibility.worldbank.org
    Software
    Stata
    Name
    Stata
    Version
    17 MP

    Reproducibility

    Technology environment

    Paper exhibits were reproduced in a computer with the following specifications:
    • OS: Windows 11 Enterprise, version 21H2
    • Processor: Intel(R) Xeon(R) Gold 6226R CPU @ 2.90GHz, 16 Core(s)
    • Memory available: 15.7 GB
    • Software version: Stata 17

    Technology requirements

    ~15 minutes runtime

    Reproduction instructions

    Request access to the data from the World Bank's Microdata Library.
    Once access is granted, edit the Master do file line 32 to adjust the default path.
    Run the main dofile to run all steps in sequence.

    Data

    Datasets
    Pakistan Early Childhood Development Phone Survey (2022)
    Name
    Pakistan Early Childhood Development Phone Survey (2022)
    Note
    Source: World Bank. Filenames: ECE Survey Data Instalment 6_original data.dta Located at: rawdata/
    Access policy
    The data is forthcoming in the World Bank's Microdata Library. The data is licensed and will be made available on request.
    Data URL
    Forthcoming https://microdata.worldbank.org/
    Data statement

    The data is available under licensed access in the World Bank's Microdata Catalog. Redistribution restrictions prevent including it directly in the reproducibility package. For more details, please refer to the README file.

    Description

    Output
    Do Psychosocial Stimulation, Parental Distress and Early Childhood Education Enrollment Show Different Associations with Early Childhood Development Outcomes for Boys and Girls? Findings from a Phone Survey in Pakistan
    Type
    Working Paper
    Title
    Do Psychosocial Stimulation, Parental Distress and Early Childhood Education Enrollment Show Different Associations with Early Childhood Development Outcomes for Boys and Girls? Findings from a Phone Survey in Pakistan
    Authors
    Emily Franchett, Amer Hasan, Elizabeth Hentschel, Mahreen Tahir-Chowdhry, Heather Tomlinson, Aisha Yousafzai, Mina Zamand
    Description
    Policy Research Working Paper (PRWP) WPS10861
    URL
    http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099530307242482046
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1596/1813-9450-10861
    Authors
    Author Affiliation Email
    Emily Franchett Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health emilyfranchett@gmail.com
    Amer Hasan World Bank ahasan1@worldbank.org
    Elizabeth Hentschel World Bank ehentschel@worldbank.org
    Mahreen Tahir-Chowdhry World bank mtahirchowdhry@worldbank.org
    Heather Tomlinson World Bank htomlinson@worldbank.org
    Aisha Yousafzai Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health ayousafzai@hsph.harvard.edu
    Mina Zamand World Bank mzamand@worldbank.org
    Date of production

    2024-07

    Scope and coverage

    Geographic locations
    Location Code
    Pakistan PAK
    Keywords
    Early child development Gender Pakistan Psychosocial stimulation Parental distress Early childhood education
    Topics
    ID Topic Parent topic ID Vocabulary Vocabulary URI
    I21 Analysis of Education I2 Journal of Economic Literature (JEL)
    I24 Education and Inequality I2 Journal of Economic Literature (JEL)

    Disclaimer

    Disclaimer

    The materials in the reproducibility packages are distributed as they were prepared by the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/The World Bank. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this event do not necessarily reflect the views of the World Bank, the Executive Directors of the World Bank, or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the materials included in the reproducibility package

    Access and rights

    License
    Name URI
    Modified BSD3 https://opensource.org/license/bsd-3-clause/

    Contacts

    Contacts
    Name Affiliation Email
    Amer Hasan World Bank ahasan1@worldbank.org
    Reproducibility WBG World Bank reproducibility@worldbank.org

    Information on metadata

    Producers
    Name Abbreviation Affiliation Role
    Reproducibility WBG DIME World Bank - Development Impact Department Verification and preparation of metadata
    Date of Production

    2024-07-12

    Document version

    1

    Citation

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