“…Although HOME shows generally strong relations with cognitive and language competence, it may not contain sufficient indicators of the experiences needed to promote particular competencies (e.g., science, art, psychomotor learning). It is also important to recognize that relations may differ depending on children's health status, parent mental health, time spent in nonparental care, and family demographics (Adi‐Japha & Klein, ; Baydar et al, ; Bradley et al, ; Bradley et al, ; Bradley et al, ; Church & Katigbak, ; Coscia et al, ; Davidson, Myers, Shamlaye, Cox, & Wilding, ; Hadeed & Sylva, ; Holditch‐Davis, Tesh, Goldman, Miles, & D'Auria, ; Johnson, Breckenbridge, & McGowan, ; Richter & Grieve, ; Wulbert et al, ). In poor communities, for instance, the dearth of material goods and opportunities for enrichment, poor nutrition, family instability, and accumulated health problems sometimes resulted in lower correlations, thereby prompting some scholars to make changes in HOME items (Holding, Abubakar, Obiero, Barr, & van Vijver, ; Kohli, Mohanty, & Kaur, ; Lozoff et al, ).…”