Senior Education Researcher, SRI Education
Kirby Chow, PhD, specializes in the academic achievement and social and emotional well-being of children from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds. She has expertise in qualitative and quantitative methods and extensive experience leading projects and partnering with state and local leaders to study and evaluate programs and interventions to improve policy and practice.
At SRI, Chow leads multiple early childhood research projects, developing survey and interview protocols, and collecting and analyzing qualitative and quantitative data. Under a Child Care Policy Research Partnership grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) Administration for Children and Families (ACF), she is the principal investigator (PI) on a project to learn about the challenges to providing stable, high-quality early care and education to Arkansas children in foster care, as well as test and evaluate solutions to address those challenges. She was also co-PI of another ACF-funded partnership project to examine the implementation of policies and initiatives in Arkansas to prevent use of suspension and expulsion in early childhood programs and promote children’s social and emotional growth. Chow was also project director of a 4-year evaluation of the Virginia Preschool Initiative Plus (VPI+) to expand high-quality programs and of a Virginia Early Childhood Foundation-funded study to build state and local early childhood systems.
Chow also leads rigorous studies and technical assistance projects to improve trauma-sensitive practices and positive behavior-management strategies. She is the project director for a U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ)-funded project to implement the Handle with Care (HWC) program, which fosters collaboration between law enforcement and schools to support students who experience trauma, with additional training and support in Metro Nashville Public Schools (MNPS). In West Virginia, Chow also co-led a DOJ-funded evaluation of the HWC program. For the Institute of Education Sciences (IES)-funded Regional Educational Laboratory (REL) Appalachia, Chow led and supported projects in Kentucky and West Virginia to implement trauma-sensitive practices in K-12 schools and community college settings.
Before joining SRI, Chow was a Society for Research in Child Development Executive Branch Fellow in the HHS Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, working on issues related to homelessness and child welfare in collaboration with other federal agencies. Chow earned her PhD in education (human development and psychology) from UCLA. She also holds an MA in education from UCLA and a BA in psychology and social welfare from the University of California, Berkeley.
Key projects
- Improving Participation of Children in Foster Care in Stable, High-Quality Early Care and Education
- Reducing Exclusionary Discipline in Arkansas Early Childhood Programs
- Virginia Preschool Initiative – Plus (VPI+)
- Regional Educational Laboratory – Appalachia – Building Safe, Caring, and Trauma-Sensitive Schools
- Evaluation of Handle With Care 2.0 – Supporting Students Who Experience Trauma
Recent publications
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Balancing Priorities: Foster Parents’ Child Care Search and Selection Process
This brief presents findings from a foster parent survey about how foster parents navigate the process of finding ECE and the factors they prioritize when selecting an ECE program.
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Early Care and Education Is an Essential Component of the Foster Care System: A View From Arkansas
This brief presents findings from a foster parent survey about the impact of ECE on their ability to accept new foster placements and the challenges they face in searching for…
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Improving Participation of Children in Foster Care in Stable, High-Quality Early Care and Education: Administrative Data Findings (Conference poster)
This conference poster presents findings from administrative data analyses about the experiences of young Arkansas children in foster care in subsidized child care.
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Improving Participation in High-Quality Early Care and Education for Young Arkansas Children: Perspectives of Resource Parents and Early Childhood Educators
This brief presents key findings from focus groups and interviews with resource parents (that is, foster parents), ECE center-based program directors, and ECE home-based providers about their experiences caring for…
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Reducing Exclusionary Discipline in Early Care and Education Programs: An Examination of the Arkansas Model
Survey findings from early childhood program directors and teachers provide insight into the implementation of Arkansas’s policy and supports designed to prevent suspension and expulsion in early care and education…
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Maine Early Childhood Consultation Partnership® (ECCP®) Pilot Final Report
SRI Education conducted an evaluation of a pilot implementation of an evidence-based, manualized model of infant and early childhood mental health consultation (IECMHC) that builds capacity of the early care…
Selected publications
- Implementation of a comprehensive state effort to reduce exclusionary discipline in early care and education settings: Arkansas’s policy. Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 67, 330–342
- Associations of teacher characteristics with preschool suspensions and expulsions: Implications for supports. Children and Youth Services Review, 129
- Understanding trauma and supporting staff and students to thrive. Blog. REL Appalachia Educational Laboratory Program