Title: Building Comprehensive Systems
1Building Comprehensive Systems for Early Childhood
Governing an Early Childhood System Opening
Session September 19, 2005 National Conference
Charles Bruner, CFPC and SECPTAN Director
2State Early Childhood Policy Technical
Assistance Network (SECPTAN) Mission
- To partner with the School Readiness Indicators
Initiative in creating indicators to foster early
childhood policy in 17 states - To provide help to state policy makers to move
forward early learning/school readiness agendas - Evidenced-based
- Timely
- Customized
- Nonpartisan
3From Indicators to Policy Most Frequently
Raised TA Questions
- How can we describe our work to get attention?
- How can we organize our work to fit together and
achieve results? - How can we mobilize support to produce action?
4Message Box SECPTANs Interconnected Answers
- Focus on results. (We have a problem.)
- Show ways to achieve them. (We have solutions.)
- Identify the investment gap. (We know where and
how to invest.) - Develop allies and mobilize support. (We all need
to step forward.) - -- chorus, not cacophony --
5Answering the Questions A Checklist Approach
- Focus on Results. The SRII Foundation.
- What all children need to start school ready to
learn Equation - Current status of children on starting school
"ready Indicators - Family and societal consequences of not starting
ready Indicators - Show Ways to Achieve Them.
- Effective programs, services, and practices to
improve school readiness Evidenced-Based
Strategies - Identify the Investment Gap and How to Address
It. - Investment opportunities to develop system Gap
Analysis - Implementation design to efficiently and
effectively develop system Governance/Management
- Identify Allies and Mobilize Support.
- Education and mobilization strategy to secure
resources Political Will-Building
6Results and Evidenced-Based Strategies
- Equation Elements
- Ready Families.
- Ready Communities
- Ready Services (Health).
- Ready Services
- (Early Childhood Education)...............
- Ready Schools.
Strategies Selected home visiting, family support
programs, developmental child welfare
services Toxin removal, public awareness/action
campaigns Health insurance, medical homes and
developmental health services, early intervention
(Part C) Quality, affordable child care, supports
for FFN providers, pre-school enriched
pre-school for low-income/vulnerable
children Transition plans, community schools
7Identifying the Investment GapComposite
Nine-State DC Average Per Child Investment by
Age
7,889
4,113
1,683
709
Early Learning Left Out Closing the Investment
Gap for Americas Youngest Children
8Effective ImplementationPlanning, Governance,
and Management Issues to Address
- Form Follows Function Defining the parameters of
the system - Follow the Money Addressing financing issues
- Building Is Done in Stages Planning,
implementing, and managing stages - Governance Requires Consent of
- the Governed Building support
- Think Globally, Act Locally
- Devolving responsibility
Building an Early Learning System The ABCs of
Planning and Governance Structures
9Form Follows Function Definition of Parameters
of an Early LearningSystem of Systems
- Economic
- Security and
- Housing System
- Police and
- Fire Protection
- System
- Culture and
- Values
- Valuing Early
- Learning
Family Support System
Health and Nutrition System
Early Learning System
Special Needs/Early Intervention Systems
Early Care and Education System
10Form Follows FunctionConsiderations
- One persons integration is another persons
fragmentation. - Parameters define core governance.
- Single governance structure unlikely and not
necessary.
11Follow the Money Potential Investments in
School Readiness Equation
12Follow the Money Considerations
- Multiple funders and state decision-makers
control resources and must be brought on board. - Major federal financing role (16 federal
sources XIX, Title V, CHCs, WIC, EFNEP, CC Food
Program, IDEA, Title IV-e, Title IV-a, CAPTA,
Head Start, Early Head Start, Even Start, CCDF,
TANF, Title I), 2/3 of current funds.
13Building is Done in StagesConsiderations
- Planning envision what new system would do and
build awareness and commitment - Implementation take strategic steps to expand
and re-allocate resources to achieve objectives - Management establish guidelines, rules, and
procedures for ongoing operation - -- stages involve different skills, passion,
leaders --
14Governance Requires Consent of the Governed
Considerations
- Governed include those charged with carrying out
changes and those for whom early learning system
is designed - No magic structure Attributes of good governance
- Representative
- Legitimate
- Sustainable (across changes in leadership)
- Effective (flexible, accountable, capable of
learning) - Authoritative (capable of marshalling resources)
15Think Globally, Act LocallyConsiderations
- Balance of Roles and Responsibilities
- Reasons for state leadership
- establishing and basic standards and objectives
- aligning resources with needs across state
- providing consumer rights to appeal and review
- Reasons for devolution
- securing local ownership and commitment
- including voluntary support system
- contouring local services to local conditions
16Developing Allies and Mobilizing Support
Strategies for Different Champion Groups
Beyond the Usual Suspects Developing New Allies
to Invest in School Readiness
17The Completed Checklist
- Focus on Results.
- What all children need to start school ready to
learn - Current status of children on starting school
"ready - Family and societal consequences of not starting
ready - Show Ways to Achieve Them.
- Effective programs, services, and strategies to
improve school readiness - Identify the Investment Gap.
- Investment opportunities to develop system
- Implementation design to efficiently and
effectively develop system - Identify Allies and Mobilize Support.
- Education and mobilization strategy to secure
resources
18Additional SECPTAN Resources
- Seven Things Policy Makers Need to Know About
School Readiness (basic arguments) - Up and Running (description of multi-site
initiatives) - On the Path to School Readiness (discussion of
universal pre-k) - Many Happy Returns (ECE economic modeling)
- Measuring Childrens School Readiness (assessment
options) - Child Welfare and School Readiness Making the
Link for Vulnerable Children - Health Care and School Readiness The Health
Communitys Role in Supporting Child Development
-- New Approaches and Model Legislation - Community Building and School Readiness The Need
to Focus on Vulnerable Neighborhoods
www.finebynine.org
19Additional Resource Basic Talking Points About
School Readiness
- 1. Learning begins at birth.
- 2. Nurture, as well as nature, matters.
- 3. School readiness is more than just what
children know. - 4. School unreadiness is costly.
- 5. Parents work.
- 6. Quality matters.
- 7. Investments pay off.
Seven Things Policy Makers Need to Know about
School Readiness
20Additional Resource Description of Multi-Site
Early Childhood Initiatives
- Initiatives in health, family support, early
childhood education, economic self-sufficiency,
child abuse prevention, pre-school, and
comprehensive early learning initiatives - Description, state/community locations,
- and contact information
Up and Running A Compendium of Multi-Site Early
Childhood Initiatives
21Additional ResourceConsiderations Regarding
Universal Pre-School
- Expected contribution to school success (part of
answer, but not silver bullet) - Parental desires and needs (culture and
time/space needs) - Features of effective programs (high quality, but
different responses for different children and
enriched pre-school for low-income/disadvantaged
children) - Workforce development considerations
- (importance of diversity)
- Pre-school as part of larger early learning
system - (integrated to other approaches and needs)
- Avoiding unintended consequences (limit
- disruptions of current early childhood programs)
- Financing (free vs. sliding scale, phase-ins,
- public/private roles)
On the Path to School Readiness Key Questions
to Consider Before Establishing Universal
Pre-Kindergarten
22Additional Resource Three Economic Development
Cases for Early Childhood Education
- Child Human Capital Development Four Seminal
ROI Studies - Community Capital Development Economic Modeling
of Contribution of Early Care to Local Economy - Adult Human Capital Development Economic
Development in Poor Neighborhoods
Many Happy Returns Three Economic Models that
Make the Case for School Readiness
23Additional Resource Measuring Childrens School
Readiness
- Discussion of value of kindergarten assessment of
what children know and can do for benchmarking
purposes - Description of issues in ensuring appropriate use
- Highlight and comparison of three state
approaches in providing comprehensive assessment - Annotated bibliography of resources on
kindergarten assessment
Measuring Childrens School Readiness Options
for Developing State Baselines and Benchmarks
24Additional Resource Health Care and School
Readiness
- Current Thinking
- Health Insurance Medical Care
- Medical Care Child Health
- Needed/Reframed Thinking
- Medical care content as well as insurance
coverage important for ensuring child health. - Transmedical services, including those focused
upon family pediatrics, needed to ensure child
health. - Health includes developmental (social, emotional,
cognitive) as well as physical health services.
- Implications of Reframed Thinking
- Expanded Use of EPSDT
- Incentives for broadened practice
Health Care and School Readiness The Health
Communitys Role in Supporting Child Development
New Approaches and Model Legislation
25Additional Resource Child Welfare and School
Readiness
- Opportunities for Action - Best Practices
- Identifying developmental needs during
investigation and assessment - Providing developmental services and service
referrals as part of in-home services - Addressing developmental needs during placement
- Addressing developmental needs in adoption
- Role of judicial leadership
Child Welfare and School Readiness Making the
Link for Vulnerable Children
26Additional Resource Community-Building and
School Readiness Focus on Vulnerable
Neighborhoods
- Rich in young children (50 more young children
as percent of population) - Significant in size (9 of all children, but
one-quarter of school unreadiness population,
with 2-5 times the rate of single parenting,
child poverty, low education, lack of savings and
home ownership) - Diverse in ethnicity (83 children of color, and
where 23 all African American and Hispanic
children live)
27Community Building and School Readiness
Implications for Policy and Practice
- Place matters, particularly for closing the
countrys achievement gap - Color blind approaches (bringing credentialed
White, non-Hispanic teachers from suburbs in to
teach preschool) wont solve, and could compound,
problem - Place-based strategies can improve school
readiness, while building community and economic
opportunity - staff and career development for people in
neighborhood - community building around school readiness
- re-entry and re-integration around fatherhood and
school readiness
28Contact Information
- Charles Bruner, Director
- Child and Family Policy Center, SECPTAN
- 1021 Fleming Building
- 218 6th Avenue
- Des Moines, IA 50309
- cbruner_at_cfpciowa.org
- SECPTAN website www.finebynine.org
- CFPC website www.cfpciowa.org
- SRII website www.gettingready.org