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Early Parenting Support on Child Development Through Age 6: The Smart Beginnings Model.

Elizabeth B Miller1, Caitlin F Canfield2, Ashleigh I Aviles3

  • 1Department of Population Health, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York.

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|December 14, 2025
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Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

The Smart Beginnings (SB) model demonstrated sustained positive impacts on child academic skills by age 6. Early parenting support through SB significantly improved children's cognitive stimulation and preacademic skills, leading to better long-term school readiness.

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Area of Science:

  • Child Development
  • Developmental Psychology
  • Educational Psychology

Background:

  • Parenting interventions aim to improve early school readiness, but long-term effects and influence pathways require further study.
  • The Smart Beginnings (SB) model is an innovative, tiered intervention from birth to age 3 designed to support parents and enhance child development.
  • Understanding the sustained impact of early life interventions is crucial for addressing educational disparities.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To describe the sustained impacts of the Smart Beginnings (SB) model on child academic skills at age 6.
  • To evaluate the mediation pathways through which the SB model influences child development.
  • To assess the long-term effectiveness of a combined universal and targeted parenting intervention.

Main Methods:

  • A single-blind, 2-site randomized clinical trial involving 403 mother-infant dyads.
  • The SB model integrates PlayReadVIP (universal, pediatric primary care) and Family Check-Up (targeted, home-based parenting intervention).
  • Mediation analyses examined intervention effects on age 6 academic skills via parental cognitive stimulation at age 2 and child academic functioning at age 4.

Main Results:

  • Significant single and serially mediated indirect effects of SB on age 6 academic outcomes were found.
  • Parental cognitive stimulation in toddlerhood and preacademic skills in preschool mediated the intervention's effects.
  • Positive and statistically significant pathways were observed for receptive vocabulary, oral comprehension, letter-word recognition, phonemic decoding, and applied problems.

Conclusions:

  • The findings support the cumulative nature of academic development throughout childhood.
  • The Smart Beginnings model demonstrates scalability and offers a promising approach to reducing early-life disparities.
  • Sustained positive impacts highlight the importance of early, comprehensive parenting support for long-term child academic success.