FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 2001 Daycare study roils in further controversy by Jessica Garrison Los Angeles Times April 25, 2001 A week after a high-profile study cast a negative light on child care, re searchers - including the study's lead statistician - are sharply questioning whether their controversial work has been misrepresented. As publicly reported last week, the study showed that the more time preschoolers spend in childcare, the more likely their teachers were to re port behavior problems such as ag gression and defiance in kindergarten. But several academics involved in the study feel that its conclusion was overstated and that other important findings never reached the public. In the aftermath, a rift has been exposed among the research team, and ques tions from other experts have caused the researchers to do additional analy sis before publishing their findings. "I feel we have been extremely ir responsible, and Fm very sorry the re sults have been presented in this way," Niagara, an herbal drink from Sweden, claims to increase sexual potency. The FDA warns that the claims may not be true, but adds the drink is probably not harmful either. BEHREND'S #1 OFF-CAMPUS HOUSING PROVIDER ALL UNITS WITHIN 10 MINUTES FROM SCHOOL SAFE SECURE BUILDING SAFE WELL-LIT OFF STREET PARKING LOTS 24-HOUR EMERGENCY MAINTENANCE WALL-TO-WALL CARPET CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING ALL TOWNHOUSE UNITS INCLUDE LIVINGROOM KITCHEN with all appliances, including dishwasher BREAKFAST ROOM with sliding glass doors onto private patio TWO BATHROOMS PRIVATE ENTRY TWO AND THREE BEDROOM UNITS AVAILABLE WASHER AND DRYER HOOK UPS 1: ~.: ~'a ~, y • • •, ;••••2 • • . q• 6. • , , • • , 1 1 • • II : • • ::>: said Margaret Burchinal, the lead stat istician on the study funded by Na tional Institute of Child Health and Human Development. "I'm afraid we have scared parents, especially since most parents in this country (have to work)." Several of those involved in the project accuse Jay Belsky, a profes sor at the University of London and one of the lead researchers on the study, of downplaying other impor tant information when he presented the findings at a news conference last week. They accuse him of having an anti-child care agenda. For his part, Belsky charges that his colleagues are "running from this data like a nuclear bomb went off' because they are committed to putting an ap proving stamp on child care. "I sometimes feel I'm in the old So viet Union, where only certain facts are allowed to be facts, and only cer tain news is allowed to be news," he said. 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For the public, the high-profile dispute illustrates how difficult it can be to separate ideology from objec tive findings, particularly on a topic as volatile as child care. "The bottom line is this isn't a simple story," said Harvard Univer sity researcher Kathleen McCartney, one of the investigators on the study. The findings predictably sent par ents into a tizzy, with many work ing parents worrying about or hotly defending their choices, and stay-at home moms feeling vindicated. But several researchers on the team said that if the public had been told other information about the study, the reaction might have been quite different. For example: • While 17 percent of kindergarteners who had been in child-care showed more assertive and aggressive behaviors, that pro portion is the norm for the general Viagra's distant cousin? WORLD & NATION , II • 1* • ; , 41.; a - population of children and adoles cents. (Only 9 percent of children who spent most of their time with their mothers were rated by teachers as showing the more troubling behav iors.) • Family interactions counted more toward children's future behavior than hours spent in child care. • In addition, researchers said that the statistics themselves are very modest: Few children exhibited above-average behavior problems, and the problems themselves were not drastic. Some parents whose children are subjects in the ongoing study have ex pressed concern and anger over the latest controversy. Investigators are worried it may cause some families to drop out, and might jeopardize their chances of having funding renewed in 2004, said Alison Clarke-Stewart, a researcher at the University of Cali- fomia, Irvine The massive research project, widely considered the largest and most authoritative of its kind in the nation, started 10 years ago with investigators White House crafts image of Bush as blunt, honest leader by Naftali Bendavid Chicago Tribune April 24, 2001 White House spokesman Ari Fleischer, describing how Presi dent Bush expressed himself dur ing the recent U.S.-China crisis, said, "The president spoke out di rectly, plainly, forthrightly and wisely." A few weeks earlier, Fleischer was asked what message Bush was sending with the expulsion of 52 Russian diplomats. Bush was acting "in a realistic and di rect way," Fleischer responded. "He's a plain-spoken man." That picture of Bush as a blunt, honest leader, a straight-shooter whose word can be trusted, is central to the image the White House is trying to craft in the early months of Bush's administration The notion of Bush as someone who always tells the truth, a theme heavily promoted during the campaign, has be come even more important to Bush now that he is in the White House. One goal is to offset what is thought to be public weariness with the per ceived slickness of former President Bill Clinton and with politicians in gen eral. Another goal is to turn a potential Bush weakness--his lack of eloquence and oratorical fluidity--into a virtue. g1;-',iYiti , :, ...,...;.F.';'111111 : . .:....iiNtil ::.11 : !..Vi ~..: : .,.: . g T 7.. , ..,. , •.•,ii!i! •-•:,,:02.01ei',‘, "If you have George Bush and you People see you as you are." want to package him and present him, At least in some quarters, the image what are you going to play to?" said has taken hold. Questions may persist Paul Brace, a political scientist at about Bush's abilities, but that does not Houston's Rice University. "He is not detract from, and may even enhance, a going to be a great orator. He's just not. feeling among some of the public that You want to keep his comments short. Bush is honest. So 'Plain-speaking, honest George' is Jennifer Walters, an administrative a good theme." assistant in Billings, Mont.. said she is Jeff Myers, who teaches communi- not a huge Bush fan. But "1 like his cations at Bryan College in Dayton, persona," she said during a recent presi- Tenn., said the contrast with Clinton is, dential visit to Montana. "He's not particularly important. fake." ."-Saying that President Bush is a straight-talking man is an easy way of making a distinction between this ad ministration and the previous adminis tration," Myers said. " 'What you see is what you get' is the impression, and that plays well with people, especially after eight years of people not ever be ing sure what they're getting." The danger for Bush may be that when he changes positions, as politi cians inevitably do, the political conse quences could be more serious. Voters accepted when they elected Clinton that he cut corners in some ways, but Bush was elected on a promise to tell it straight. Bush already has abandoned his cam paign pledge to limit carbon dioxide emissions at power plants. Some mili tary leaders have complained that he has backed off a commitment to give them more money. And Bush will almost cer tainly have to embrace a tax cut of less than $1.6 trillion despite repeated as sertions that nothing else will do. "He has--if not changed positions on issues--has gone from right to left and back to the middle," said Judith Trent, who teaches political communication at the University of Cincinnati. "Maybe that's why it's necessary for them to say he always tells it like it is. That is a per- going room to room down hospital corridors asking new mothers if they would participate in a study of child development. More than 1,000 of the original subjects in HI cities are still signed up, and investigators have fol lowed the children ever since. The investigators visit with their par ents, giving them personality tests and check lists to fill out. They spend hours observing classrooms and day care centers, talking with teachers and day care providers. And then they use com plex statistical analysis to figure out what it all means. Data from the early years of the study - which has cost the federal gov ernment $BO million so far - is avail able to the public, and all the data even tually will be made available. The most recent findings were pre sented at a conference last week of the Society for Research and Child Devel opment in Minneapolis. But because the work has not yet been published, it has also not yet been formally cri tiqued by other experts. Above all, the researchers said they of Lebanon in the Oval Office of the sona they arc trying to give him. We don't know yet whether it is stick ing. - Bush's aides are trying to make sure it does stick. In a recent interview. White House aide Mary Matalin put it this way: "The operative thing here is that he says what he means and means what he says. That defines the admin istration.- "That's who he is," added Karl Rove, Bush's senior adviser. "I think people just instinctively sense that. Being president is sort of like "The Emperor's New Clothes' at the end of the day. Bush himself regularly advertises his own honesty, as in a news conference in March when he was asked about his meetings with foreign leaders. "I'm a pretty straightforward fellow," Bush said. "I don't mind making my case, and it's important. It's important for world leaders to know exactly where the United States is coming from. ... A friend is somebody who's willing to tell the truth." Bush also emphasizes this theme when praising others. In Chicago on March 6, Bush paid a high compliment to House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R- "He's the kind of fellow who when he gives you his word, he means it," Bush said. "Sometimes that doesn't happen all the time in the political pro cess. Sometimes they'll look you in the eye and not mean it. The speaker means it when he tells you something." For the Bush team, part of the mes sage means demonstrating that Bush honors his campaign promises. As Texas governor, Bush had considerable success outlining a handful of big ideas in his campaign and then pushing them through, and he is trying to do the same thing in the White House. "Bush is trying to capitalize on per haps an image problem that Clinton need to do more analysis because they don't know what the numbers mean. Some studies by their nature can leave more room for interpretation based on ideology, scientists say. A study recording whether patients died or not has a result that is clearly good or had. The child care study, by con trast, measured how children were be having at kindergarten age - a mea sure whose "goodness" or "badness" may he much less clear. Such a study tempts alternative interpretations much more richly," said Daniel Kevtes, a scholar of the history of science. All the researchers said they are committed to continue working with each other in the future. Ultimately, they said, the conflict may benefit the project. It is unusual to have a collabora tion. for It) years that has included people having these different views," Clarke-Stewart said. " That still means there's room for interpretation here." White House Tuesday. had, which was that he was manipula tive," said Brace, who studies presiden- tial images "Bush needs to have extraordinary credibility right now, given the close margins in Congress. He needs to speak with authority, and he has to be believed." Rove, Bush's top political strategist, said such follow-through is crucial. - It's absolutely vital," Rove said. "To do otherwise undermines confidence in the system. These elections have to standfor not just a popularity contest, but people have to have confidence that if they vote for someone based on something they, say that they're actuallycommitted to doing it." It also sends a politically useful mes sage about Bush. Americans cherish the notion that their presidents are men of truth, from George Washington's "1 cannot tell a lie" to "Honest Abe" Lin coln to "Give-'em-hell Harry" Truman. The less attractive side of this cru sade has been aides' willingness to de ride Bush's opponents as hypocrites and liars in contrast. As Bush began his presidential cam paign, supporters contrasted his blunt ness with Clinton--who claimed that oral sex was not sex and quibbled over the meaning of the word "is." While Bush might stumble over his words, his backers said, he embodied a simple American decency. But Bush was not running against Clinton, and his aides soon started at tacking other rivals on their integrity. Shortly after Sen. John McCain, R- Ariz., surged in the New Hampshire primary, the Bush campaign accused him of being someone who "says one thing and does another." Once Bush won the Republican nomination, one of his campaign's principal messages was that his rival, Democratic Vice President Al Gore, was untruthful. The Bush team issued a perpetual stream of press releases headlined, "The Gore Detector: A Regular Report on Al Gore's Adven tures With the Truth." Now Bush is not in a political race, but like all presidents, he is constantly shaping his image with a view to ap proval ratings and ultimately to re-elec tion. And the image he wants is clear.