Title: TEAMWORK
1TEAMWORK
2Discovery Grant Learning Seminar 1
Data Sources and Analysis
- Priscilla F. Canny, Ph.D.
- Peg Oliveira, Ph.D.
- CT Voices for Children
- February, 2002
3Overview
- Importance of data
- Community Toolbox
- Indicators of child well-being
- Actual data census, SSP, town spreadsheets
- Data sources
- Data tips, cautions, limitations
- Data analysis and interpretation
4Why Collect Data?
- Everyone wants it now
- Funders
- Media
- Public officials
- Legislators
- Parents
- Community programs for planning
5Data Drives Public Policy
- Over the last decade, there has been a marked
shift in the content of public discussions about
children and families. Discussions are now much
more likely to be based on research and
statistical facts rather than ideology and
rhetoric. News stories and policy discussions
are more likely to rely on objective facts
regarding the status of child and family
well-being.
William P. O'Hare KIDS COUNT Coordinator The
Annie E. Casey Foundation
6Two Local Examples of Data-Driven Success
- New Haven
- Early childhood education initiative
- Asthma initiative
- New Britain
7Mary Ellen Powell New Britain Foundation
- The report has provided us with baseline data
that we did not have before. - It has been a guiding force for us in grantmaking
decisions we have made a number of grants that
address directly findings from the report. - The report has also been a catalyst for several
initiatives we are about to embark upon including
the Discovery Grant, an asthma initiative and a
possible oral health initiative. - The United Way has established a special task
force of its board to identify additional
initiatives to implement based on the findings of
the report. - The report has also been used by non-profit
organizations. Several have quoted statistics
from the report in proposals to us and other
funders aimed at addressing the needs of children
and youth. We feel confident saying that a
number of these organizations have secured
funding as a result of having this information
from the report.
8Usefulness of Data
- Are there any other other communities here that
have gathered data and interpreted it for
community planning needs? comments? - What have you done in your community?
9Why Collect Data?Community Toolbox
- Information provides knowledge
- Information demonstrates credibility
- Information leads to change
- Information is power
- Information is a tool
http//ctb.ku.edu
10Why Collect Data Power
- Data is a powerful tool with which to
- Make decisions on issues affecting children and
families - Define and understand baseline, current situation
- Prioritize and plan for the future, identify
areas where action is most needed, set goals,
measure progress towards goals - Monitor progress on childrens issues over time
- Inform the policy making process
11Why Collect Data Tool for Collaboration
- Gets everyone around the table
- Helps develop buy in
- Facilitates data collection
12Indicators of Child Well BeingTab 4
- National, state, local examples
- Rationale for key indicators of child well-being
13Indicators of Child Well-Being
- Demographic
- Economic
- Infant and child health
- Education
- Safety and Security
14Demographic Indicators
- Age
- Gender
- Race and ethnicity
- Maternal education, language
- Context of childrens lives
15Economic Security Indicators
- Household income (per capita income)
- Poverty
- Eligibility for free and reduced price meals
- Good annual proxy for child poverty
- Public Assistance
- Unemployment
16Infant and Child Health Indicators
- Prenatal care
- Infant mortality
- Low birthweight
- Immunizations
- Injuries
- Asthma
- Obesity
17Education Indicators
- Early childhood education
- availability, cost and utilization of child care
- Preschool attendance
- CMT scores
- Dropout rates
18Safety and Security Indicators
- Child abuse and neglect
- Juvenile violent crime rates
- Family violence
19Sources of Data
- Public records
- Local data
- Surveys
- Focus groups
- Individual interviews
- Inventories of resources/assets
20Census DataTab 5
- Census data
- factfinder.census.gov
- Short form (demographics) available-in packet
- SF3 and 4 (economics, education, employment) this
summer and fall (2002) - Yearly estimates (CPS) not done for towns, and
barely valid for state (demographics, poverty)
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23Town DataTab 7
24Existing Data Sources
- Review data sources pages
- (Tab 8)
25Where to Call for ECE Data
26Some Data May Not Be Available
- Mental health indicators
- How many children are read to
- Are children ready for school
- Are schools ready for children
- Percent of children who demonstrate age
appropriate developmental skills - Quality of child care
- Others?
27Data Cautions
- Timeliness of data
- Example State Health Department, 2000 Census
Data - Quality of data
- Ask questions
- Who and how collected ( preschool)
- Comparability of data
- Example FRPM- definitions change
- Example Data from two different sources
- per capita income
28Estimates ofPer capita income
CPEC-1998 personal income-BEA
DECD- 1998 money income-census
29Data Collection CautionsEven Existing Data Can
Be Difficult to Collect
- Often state and local officials either too busy
or unwilling to give data-- worried it will be
misunderstood, defensive
30Limitations of Existing Data
- Census
- Race/ethnicity
- Not 1990, 2000 not ready
- Self-report
- Child poverty
- No annual estimates for towns
- TANF
- Obsolete definition
31Look Behind the Numbers
- Example 1. Fighting in a school in Colorado
- Example 2 Branford drop out rate
- Example 3 Variation among schools
32Child Indicators New Haven Suburbs 1998
11
21
4
1. adjusted for 1996 population 2. based on
eligibility for free and reduced price lunch 3.
percent meeting state goal region 5 Amity
High School
33Example 2Branford Dropout rate1997-2001
34Example 3 Variation Among SchoolsManchester
School Poverty
35Example of Presentation of Data Manchester
School Poverty
36Data Interpretation and Analysis
- Comparisons
- Town with itself, within town (eg schools,
neighborhoods), with other towns, with state,
with nationjudgment by each variable - Danger of small numbers (lt10), small samples
(lt100) unreliable 3 year averages - Other variables that could have an impact on
changes in data (eg changing economics)
37Data Analysis, Interpretation and Prioritizing
- SWOT analysis
- How to interpret negative versus positive
- What is your philosophy glass half full, glass
half empty - Denial, defensiveness
- Bring multiple sources of data together and
interpret
38From Data to Action
- Gathering information is only putting the pieces
of puzzle on the table - Need to put the puzzle together
- Need to look at data
- Get everyone around the table and discuss what
the data shows
39Future workshop?
40Future Workshops
- Data tips 201
- Count your data
- Compute your data
- Compare your data
- Present your data
- Examples of how to present data
- Hands-on tutorials accessing data on the Internet
41Expanded Notebook
- More town data health, early childhood
education, crime, safety - A Guide to Using Data for Effective Advocacy
- A Community Toolbox Assessing Community Needs
and Resources - A Guide to Creating Community Report Cards
42Website www.ctkidslink.org