Cotlands joined the ELOM learning community in 2016 and sent facilitators to be trained as ELOM assessors. In 2017, they conducted an assessment of a sample of children (final n= 61) in their playgroups. This identified some areas for strengthening the training of their early learning facilitators in activities for particular domains.
In 2018 the Cotlands playgroup model was one of the programmes evaluated in the ELPO Study. Overall results indicated a significant increase of 20 ELOM standard score points from baseline to end-line after controlling for age and other variables.
Cotlands used key findings to inform their strategy and action plans. Examples of data informed actions are included below.
Finding 1: Qualifications of the practitioner are not a significant predictor of ELOM outcomes. Ongoing monitoring and support of practitioners are associated with ELOM outcomes. As a result, the team –
Finding 2: Height-for-age scores (a proxy for nutritional and health status) are related to child development outcome scores. As a result, the team –
Finding 3: Higher levels of programme exposure predict better child outcomes, but on average, Cotlands children only attended 51 of the 98 sessions or 52% of the available sessions. As a result, the team –
Finding 4: Cognition and executive functioning and visual processing skills are lacking in the Cotlands programme children. As a result, the team –
For more information on Cotlands, please visit their website.
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