Getting young children to engage with pictures, texts and
questions through interactive reading approaches can accelerate
their early language development, with some making up to seven
additional months’ progress. This is according to an updated
version of the Education Endowment Foundation’s (EEF) Early Years
Toolkit, launched today (Wednesday 8th February).
The updated Early Years Toolkit summarises findings from the best
available international evidence. It is designed to support early
years professionals to use their resources to improve learning
outcomes for their children, particularly those from
socio-economically disadvantaged backgrounds.
The Toolkit includes evidence on ten topics, including parental
engagement (+ five months) and giving children extra hours of
early years provision (+ three months). For each topic, it
presents an average impact in months progress, alongside
information on cost and the strength of the evidence base.
According to the Toolkit entry on “communication and language”,
approaches that support early language development – such as
interactive reading and teaching and modelling vocabulary - can
have a very high impact on learning and are inexpensive to
implement.
Interactive reading strategies could include encouraging young
children to think about what happens next, or to relate stories
to their own experience. Vocabulary strategies could include
explicitly labelling the different parts of an object – such as a
flower – and encouraging young children to repeat the different
words.
These high potential approaches to early communication and
language are explored further in a brand-new resource, the Early
Years Evidence Store, also launched today. Developed as part of
the EEF’s work supporting the Department for Education’s Stronger
Practice Hubs, the Evidence Store takes a deeper look at priority
themes for early years learning and development. It explains and
illustrates how different evidence-informed approaches can be put
into practice with children in early years settings.
According to pre-pandemic estimates, the attainment gap between
socio-economically disadvantaged five-year-olds and their
classmates was around 4.6 months in 2019. Research by the EEF
found that there were, on average, three more children per class,
not reaching the expected levels of development by the end of
reception class in 2021, when compared to pre-pandemic levels.
The release of the updated Toolkit and the new Evidence Store are
part of the EEF’s increased focus on early years education, in
recognition of the crucial role that early years provision plays
in combatting education inequality.
Professor Becky Francis CBE, Chief Executive of the
Education Endowment Foundation, said:
“Giving every child access to great learning and development
opportunities in the early years is absolutely crucial to making
sure they achieve their potential. Early years
professionals play a central role in this mission. But, with the
sector facing a number of immediate challenges, they shoulder a
huge amount of responsibility in their day-to-day working
lives.
“We want early years professionals feel empowered to use
education evidence to their advantage, so that they can make
informed choices about the strategies they adopt in their
practice.
“Through our renewed focus on the early years – and the new
resources we’ve launched today - we hope that the EEF can play a
role in providing meaningful and timely guidance to all those
working at this crucial stage of our education
system.”
Dr Lesley Curtis OBE, Headteacher at Everton Nursery
School and Family Centre, said:
“Here at Everton Nursery School and Family Centre we
constantly use education research to inform and improve our
practice.
“Using evidence provides opportunities for all staff within
the Nursery School to reflect and question their practice at a
deeper level. This in turn impacts on the life chances of young
children through having high quality reflective educators”.
Liz Bolt, Manager at Roberttown Community Centre and
Pre-School, said:
“I think I would say that to truly make a difference for
children, we need to know what works (everything works somewhere,
nothing works everywhere). To evaluate this, we need to see
evidence of research, its application and effectiveness, and look
at how this relates to our cohorts of children and their specific
needs.”
Rob Newton, Associate Strategic Director at Huntington
Research School, said:
“Every early years educator will recognise much of the
content of the toolkit and evidence store as fundamental
components of their practice.
“These updated and new resources shine a research informed
spotlight on aspects of that can potentially make the biggest
difference for our youngest children.
“They can really support practitioners to continue to improve
practice and provision in their settings.”
NOTES TO EDITORS:
- The Early Years Toolkit and
Early Years Evidence Store
will be publicly available and free to access from 0001 on
Wednesday.
- The Early Years Toolkit accompanies our Teaching and Learning
Toolkit, which summarises key lessons from the evidence
around best practice in primary and secondary school education.