2005 Neighborhood Profiles: Dorchester - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 41
About This Presentation
Title:

2005 Neighborhood Profiles: Dorchester

Description:

Established: 1994, as a project of Associated Early Care and Education's ... however, if you have the social life of a kumquat.)' (UNIX Programmer's Manual) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:41
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 42
Provided by: czimm
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: 2005 Neighborhood Profiles: Dorchester


1
2005 Neighborhood Profiles Dorchester
  • What do children and families need?
  • Whats available?
  • How good is it?
  • Boston EQUIP
  • Boston Early Education Quality Improvement
    Project
  • A project of
  • Funding provided by Boston Community Partnerships
    for Children

2
Overview
  • Boston EQUIP Model
  • Methodology
  • Demand and Supply
  • Quality
  • Next steps

3
The Boston Early Education Quality Improvement
ProjectBoston EQUIP
  • Established 1994, as a project of Associated
    Early Care and Educations Research and Policy
    department
  • Mission to collaborate with members of the
    Boston early education community to
    systematically evaluate, set goals for, and
    improve upon the quality of early childhood
    programs.
  • Primary tool Community Profiles surveys.
    Collected data 1995, 1997, 1999, 2001, with the
    most recent being 2004

4
The Boston EQUIP model
2. Set goals and benchmarks
3. Improve upon the quality
1. Evaluate
5
2004 Community Profiles Methodology
  • Community Profiles surveys
  • Center / Head Start - All
  • Family Child Care - Stratified random sample
  • Public School Preschool - All
  • Timeline 2 year process
  • Used other community and national sources as
    relevant

6
Community Profiles Survey Response Rates
additional surveys sent to/received from Boston
Public Schools with K2 classrooms
7
Neighborhoods
Charlestown / North End
East Boston
Back Bay/ B.Hill/ DT
Allston-Brighton
South End / Chinatown/ Fenway
South Boston
Jamaica Plain / Roxbury
Boston CPC Neighborhoods are based on the Boston
Public Health Commission Neighborhood boundaries
Dorchester
Roslindale / W. Rox / Hyde Park
Mattapan
8
DEMAND FOR EARLY CARE AND EDUCATION IN
DORCHESTER
9
Young Child Population in Dorchester
10,273
11,849
12,374
  • 2002 BPHC
  • maternal residence Dorchester

Note population children birth to 5 years, 4
months
10
Child Population by Neighborhood
28 of population of Boston
Boston population 42,822
11
Characteristics of Young Child Population
  • Age
  • 6,200 are infant-toddlers (birth to 2 years, 8
    months)
  • 5,649 are preschoolers (2 years, 9 months to 5
    years, 4 months)
  • Income
  • Approximately 28 (3,318) live below 25 of
    state-median-income
  • Approximately 56 (6,636) live below 50 of
    state-median-income
  • Working Families
  • 73 of young children live with at least one
    caregiver in labor force

12
SUPPLY OF EARLY CARE AND EDUCATION IN DORCHESTER
13
of Programs Providers
14
Early Care Education Capacity
Dorchester provides 26 of Bostons capacity
Total Boston capacity 18,876
15
Capacity by Type of Care in Dorchester
16
Dorchester Capacity by Age
Infant-toddlers 30
Preschoolers 70
17
THE RELATIONSHIP OF SUPPLY DEMAND IN DORCHESTER
18
Is There Sufficient Supply to Meet Demand in
Dorchester
Answer Depends on how define demand
  • Total population
  • 2. Low-income children
  • 3. Children living in working families
  • 4. Universal Demand Estimates

19
Relationship of Supply to Total Population
20
Supply Minus Demand Formula
Unmet Need (-) Or Excess Supply ()
Supply
-
Demand
Infant-toddler Supply 1,447
Infant-toddler Demand 6,200
-
-4,753
21
Infant-toddler Supply minus Demand
23 of demand is met by capacity in Dorchester
22
Preschool Supply minus Demand
58 of preschool demand is met by supply in
Dorchester
23
Supply minus Low-income Demand (children living
below 50 of SMI)
75 of low-income demand met by supply in
Dorchester
24
Working Family Supply minus Demand
71 of working family demand met by supply in
Dorchester
1,001
to
2,000
0
to
1,000
-1,001
to
0
-2,000
to
1,000
25
Universal Demand Estimates
Infant-toddler universal demand
50 Preschool universal demand 77
26
Infant-toddler Supply minus Universal Demand
47 of Infant-toddler Universal Demand is met by
supply in Dorchester
Total for Boston -5,996
27
Preschool Supply minus Universal Demand
76 of Preschool Universal Demand is met by
supply in Dorchester
Total for Boston 2,615
28
Summary of Supply Demand
Is There Sufficient Supply to Meet Demand in
Dorchester
  • Total population
  • 2. Low-income children
  • 3. Children living in working families
  • 4. Universal Demand Estimates
  • Other Factors
  • Serving children from Dorchester only?
  • Affordability of care (subsidized versus
    non-subsidized care)?

29
QUALITY OFEARLY CARE AND EDUCATIONIN DORCHESTER
30
Quality of Early Care and Education Overview
  • Program quality
  • Accreditation
  • Teacher quality
  • Education levels
  • Salary

31
Accreditation
n 330
(NAEYC, NAFCC or possess active CDA if family
child care provider)
32
Teacher Quality Bachelor Degree or Higher
Dorchester
Boston
Boston Public School Preschools
100

Teachers

Paraprofessionals
16
Directors
69
63
Community Based/Head Start Center
25
36
Lead Teachers
Teachers
21
6
Assistant Teachers
11
2
Family Child Care

14
Providers
unable to determine no survey data available
or small sample
33
Teacher Salary - Boston
  • Boston Public Schools average teacher hourly rate
    57.93 (Range 36.67-70.27)
  • Center / Head Start Lead Teacher average hourly
    rate 14.00
  • Family child care provider average hourly
    earnings revenue (out-of-pocket expenses
    cost of using home) 7.32 across MA

Data source Boston Teachers Union Community
Profiles 2003-2004 C/HS survey Massachusetts
Cost and Quality study on Family Child Care
www.wcwonline.org/earlycare/FamilyChildCare2004.pd
f
34
Salary for Community-Based/Head Start Centers
Average Hourly Pay of Community
Based/Head Start Center
Full-time Staff
25
Boston
Boston
22
Dorchester
21.09
20
15
14
13.32
Salary (/hour)
12
11.61
10
10.20
10
5
0
Director
Lead
Teacher
Asst.
Teacher
Teacher
Data source Community Profiles 2003-2004 C/HS
survey
35
LOOKING AHEAD
36
Higher Teacher Education Requirements
  • What do we know?
  • High quality standards are being set with BA
    requirements and deadlines
  • 100 of Public School Preschool teachers in
    Boston have a BA or higher, only 25 of Center
    and Head Start Lead teachers in Dorchester
    currently have a BA
  • What do we not know?
  • Suspect certain barriers exist non-traditional
    students, English as a second language, cost,
    time, courses and certificates that dont
    matriculate
  • What percentage of teachers are currently
    enrolled in a degree-granting program?
  • What are best practices for supporting
    non-traditional students to earn higher education
    degrees?
  • What are we doing to support the current and
    future workforce to earn higher education
    degrees? What data do we need to make these
    decisions?

37
Universal Voluntary High Quality Preschool
  • Capacity for UPK
  • Is the current capacity being maximized? How much
    does capacity need to expand? Who will expand? By
    when must they expand?
  • Qualified workforce
  • Higher education degrees
  • Expanding the workforce as capacity expands
  • Integrating child care and early education
  • Boston and its process
  • A process will need to be developed that
    incorporates education about the issues,
    collaborative decision-making, and advocacy.

38
What can we use this data for?
Now that we have all this useful information, it
would be nice to be able to do something with it.
(Actually, it can be emotionally fulfilling just
to get information. This is usually only true,
however, if you have the social life of a
kumquat.) (UNIX Programmer's Manual)
  • Planning Resource Allocation
  • What needs to be planned?
  • Improving quality and access
  • Higher education/UPK
  • Where will this planning occur?
  • Individual agency
  • Neighborhood
  • Boston

39
The Boston EQUIP model
2. Set goals and benchmarks
3. Improve quality/ access
1. Evaluate
40
What can we use this data for?
  • Planning Resource Allocation
  • What needs to be planned?
  • Improving quality and access
  • Higher education/UPK
  • Where will planning occur?
  • Individual agency
  • Neighborhood
  • Boston
  • Unanswered Questions
  • Subsidized care
  • Workforce

41
For more information
www.bostonequip.org Corey Zimmerman Boston
EQUIP Associated Early and Education 95 Berkeley
St., Suite 306 Boston, MA 02116 617-695-0700,
ext. 229 e-mail czimmerman_at_associatedece.org
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com