How our work is making a difference

SEE OUR WORK

The Crane Center for Early Childhood Research and Policy is a multidisciplinary research center dedicated to conducting high-quality research that improves children’s learning and development at home, in school and in the community.

Our Work

Our work ranges from multi-year, federally funded projects that examine outcomes of thousands of children and families, to program evaluation work in our state, to smaller scale analyses and briefs meant to inform policy makers and practitioners.

Recent News

National Hispanic Heritage Month
Aspects of the Hispanic and Latine experience in the U.S. have informed Crane research on early childhood, on topics including dual language learners and kindergarten transition.
‘Time poverty’ hinders academic achievement by students who are parents
This week in Tuned In: How to choose a high-quality preschool program; family, friend and neighbor child care arrangements in immigrant communities; and federal funds to help Ohio research and reduce infant mortality.
Huang receives Fulbright-Hays grant to take language teachers to Taiwan
Crane faculty associate Dr. Becky Huang has received a Fulbright-Hays Group Projects Abroad award from the U.S. Department of Education to lead a dozen pre-service or in-service educators to Taiwan next summer to teach English in K-12 schools and to learn about multilingual education through a comparative lens.
CRANE RESEARCH FORUM RECAP – Rebuilding After COVID-19: Does School-Based Pre-K Hold Promise?
During the September Crane Research Forum Dr. Lora Cohen-Vogel and Dr. Michael Little discussed the role of school-based pre-kindergarten in the future of early childhood education in the United States.