Title: Kids Matter:
1Kids Matter IMPROVING OUTCOMES FOR CHILDREN IN
WASHINGTON STATE
A framework for building an early childhood system
ECCS National Meeting Reston, Virginia 9-26-06 Ch
ildrens Cabinets Advisory Bodies
2System Building Partners
Lorrie Grevstad, Department of Health, Washington
State, lorrie.grevstad_at_doh.wa.gov Sangree
Froelicher, Head Start State Collaboration
Office The Build Initiative, froelsm_at_dshs.wa.gov
Garrison Kurtz, Foundation for Early Learning
The Build Initiative, garrison_at_earlylearning.org
3Kids Matter FrameworkA Tool to
- Bring together people and organizations through
common goals - Reduce fragmentation of systems and services
- Provide policy guidance to decision-makers
- Contribute to strong programs, services, schools,
and communities
4Kids Matter Pillars of the Plan
5Kids Matter Hallmarks
- Approaches early childhood systems as a
collaborative effort - Serves as an over-arching bridge for a
comprehensive and integrated framework - Defines common goals and outcomes
- Outlines specific strategies and partners
- Focuses on accountability and evaluation of
progress
6Kids Matter
- Kids Matter is a framework of prioritized
outcomes
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8Early Learning Governance Structures in Washington
- Current Momentum
- Change and Possibilities
- Up Down and Sideways think outside the
lines
9A Time of Change
Sparking Possibilities Together to Form a New
System for Children and Families in Washington
State
10Changing Early Learning Context in Washington
State
- Washington Learns
- Early Learning Council
- Department of Early Learning
- Thrive by Five Public-Private Partnership
- Gates Focus Groups
11Washington Learns
12Other Efforts Influencing Washington Learns
13Early Learning Council
14Early Learning Council
- Governors ELC Recommendation Parameters
- Vision and Timing (ten year vision for state
education system) - Raising the Bar (raise educational attainment,
set rigorous standards, expect high quality) - Building on Success (comprehensive, phased in
implementation plan that builds on early success) - Being Accountable for Results (must measurable to
demonstrate progress)
15 Early Learning Council
- ELC Work Group Updates
- Finance Study
- Regulatory (Shivon)
- QRIS (Sandy Nelson Dee West)
- Early Learning/K12 (Robin Denney)
- Early Learning Benchmarks (Kelli Bohanon,
Enrique Garza, Anna Hogan, Cheri Raff, Kisha
Thomas, Graciela Valencia, Dawn Williams)
16Department of Early Learning
- Vision/Intent (HB 2964)
- Implement state early learning policy
- Coordinate, consolidate and integrate child care
and early learning programs to administer
programs and funding efficiently - Support public/private sectors toward
comprehensive and collaborative system - Encourage best practices
17DRAFT 5/19/06
- A public-private partnership working to help
ensure all Washington children succeed - in school and life.
Thrive by Five is a recognized trademark of the
Credit Union National Association (CUNA)
18Why a public-private partnership?
- A partnership brings the assets of each sector to
the table to leverage social change. - Private organizations, such as foundations and
businesses, are able to bring expertise,
credibility, nimbleness, and flexible funding to
a problem. - The public sector offers experience, expertise
and brings considerable public resources,
infrastructure and political legitimacy. -
- Each of these assets is crucial to creating
lasting, sustainable change. - In the absence of a strong public-private
partnership for early learning, Washington misses
an opportunity that other states are seizing
the opportunity to coordinate, support, rise
above politics and do whats right for children.
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20Thrive by Five Partnership Overview of Pooled and
Aligned Funding Strategies
21Summary of Strategy
- Targeted Demonstration Communities a
comprehensive initiative in two communities to
ensure that all children and families within
these selected communities have access to
high-quality early learning. - Assess effectiveness of high-quality early
learning, including parenting, on outcomes for
children demonstrate a community wide,
comprehensive, mixed-income approach. Learn with
and from parents/caregivers. - Promising Models support innovative efforts on a
smaller scale to improve early learning for
children throughout Washington state. - Build knowledge replicate and bring to scale
effective programs broaden acceptance and
buy-in. - Statewide Efforts support, promote, and
encourage statewide efforts to improve early
learning across the state. These efforts include
programmatic initiatives, parent education, and
other strategic opportunities for statewide early
learning improvements. - Increased capacity and strengthened
infrastructure systems change build knowledge. - Community Education/Advocacy encourage and
promote quality early learning as a statewide
priority - Increased public investment, appropriate
policies parent demand for quality public
understanding and knowledge build parent demand
broaden participants that will invest and
advocate.
22Draft Program GuidelinesWhat we will fund
Grant recipients are aligned with WA state school
readiness
Center programs meet 5 standards of quality
Programs are focused on either
Our funding will support
- Highly qualified, trained, and adequately
compensated teachers - Strong, research-driven curriculum emphasizing
emotional, social, cognitive, and physical
development - Research-based education and programs for
parents parental involvement in care - Low childteacher ratios
- Appropriate physical space
- Quality Rating System
- Professional development
- Curriculum development
- Physical improvements
- Pre/post natal support programs
- Home-based literacy programs
- Parent education
- and support programs
- Child development classes
- Information and referral resources
- Case management
- Community education classes
- FFN promising models
- Physical well-being, health, and motor
development - Social and emotional development
- Approaches toward learning
- Cognition and general knowledge
- Language, communication, and literacy
- Parents are involved in childs early learning
Centers (Children in licensed care)
Homes (Children in the care oftheir parents and
care-givers)
23Draft Public-Private Partnership Structure
24Gates Focus Groups
- Recommendations from Early Learning Focus
Groups - Make clear whats at stake why
- Use simple statistics
- Bridge the gap of what is known and what should
happen - Focus on parents
- Pay Now or Pay Later
- Emphasize local and community programs
25Early Learning Governance Structures in
Washington
- Structure of the Cabinets or Boards
- Politics
- Being Effective
- Challenges
26Early Learning Governance Structures in
Washington
- Strategies used
- What has worked ?
- How can these bodies be helpful ?
- What would you have done differently ?
27- Examples of how we are using the Kids Matter
Framework
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29Lessons Learned
- Be STRATEGIC !
- BUILD on existing efforts and structures
- Be INTENTIONAL
- Help others see CONNECTIONS that work for
them ! - Be open to the possibilities
30THANK YOU
- Lorrie Grevstad
- ECCS lead -Kids Matter
- Department of Health
- Washington State
- 360.236.3560
- Lorrie.Grevstad_at_doh.wa.gov