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Working Together: Head Start Programs

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Title: Working Together: Head Start Programs


1
Working TogetherHead Start Programs the
McKinney-Vento Federal Act
  • Pennsylvanias Homeless Childrens Initiative

2
McKinney-Vento Federal ActA law to protect
homeless children through educational stability.
  • . . .through it all, school is the only thing
    that has kept me going. I know that every day
    that I walk in those doors, I can stop thinking
    about my problems. . .Carrie Arnold, LeTendre
    Scholar, formerly homeless student, 2002

3
Do You Know?
  • Nightly, there are approximately 2.5 million
    homeless people in the United States.
  • Half of those people. . .1.25 million. . . are
    children from birth to 18 years of age.
  • Single women and their families are the fastest
    growing population.
  • Domestic Violence is the most frequent cause for
    women to leave their homes.

4
Did you know?
  • The average age of a homeless person is 9 years.
  • Head Start now shares the same definition of
    homeless as public school districts in the
    United States.
  • Program funds and guidance are provided by the
    McKinney-Vento Act, originally passed in 1987.

5
Eligibility Who is Homeless?
  • Children who lack a fixed, regular and adequate
    nighttime residence
  • Sharing housing of others due to loss of housing,
    economic hardship, or similar reason (Doubled
    up)
  • Living in motels, hotels, trailers, camping
    grounds, tents, barns, cars, abandoned buildings,
    etc due to lack of adequate alternative
    accommodations
  • Living in emergency or transitional shelters
  • Abandoned, throw-away, runaway children not
    living with a parent or legal guardian
  • Migratory children living in above circumstances
  • Pregnant and parenting teens living in homes for
    unwed mothers
  • Awaiting Foster Care placement

6
Awaiting Foster Care
  • Pennsylvania Department of Education BEC (Basic
    Education Circular) defines
  • Children awaiting foster care placement
  • Includes youth in
  • Interim or respite foster care
  • Kinship Care
  • Evaluation or diagnostic centers or placement for
    the sole purpose of evaluation
  • Basic Education Circular Education for Homeless
    Youth (February 29, 2008)

7
Are there people living in shelters HERE?
  • There are approximately 250 Shelters in
    Pennsylvania servicing Homeless Families and
    Youth.
  • The shelters may be
  • Domestic violence, victims are predominately
    women and their children (residency is 30 days.)
  • Homeless couples, families, singles (18 and
    over).
  • Runaway and throwaway teens (residency is usually
    2 weeks).
  • Pregnant and parenting teens
  • Bridge or Transitional housing for single parents
    are their children (residency is 18 to 24 months)
  • Hotel/Motel stays (usually 2 3 days in duration)

8
Rural Vs. Urban
  • Rural
  • Living in cars, parks, campgrounds, barns, tents,
    hunting cabins, etc.
  • Living with friends or relatives (Doubled and
    Tripled-Up)
  • Living in run down homes often without running
    water or heat, windows are replaced with
    cardboard, plastic, or wood, roof covered with
    tarps, etc.
  • Less likely to accept or seek our services
  • Fewer resources available
  • More families, stable populations (do not move as
    frequently)
  • Urban
  • More people living in shelters
  • Transient populations (families will move in and
    out of locations)
  • More single adults
  • Homelessness is a more visible issue people
    sometimes on the streets
  • Open to services
  • More resources and funding available

9
How Do Schools Determine Homelessness
  • Was there an event?
  • Flood
  • Fire
  • Domestic Violence
  • Thrown Out
  • Eviction
  • Legal Definition
  • fixed, regular, adequate

10
Early Care Education
  • Head Start Early Head Start
  • Child Care
  • IDEA
  • State Pre-Kindergarten Programs
  • Other Early Care and Education Partners

11
Preschool-Aged Children and McKinney Vento
Federal Law
  • District Liaisons must ensure that families and
    children have access to Head Start, Even Start
    and other public preschool programs administered
    by the school district (LEA).
  • State plans must describe procedures that ensure
    that homeless children have access to public
    preschool programs.

12
Head Start Act 101
  • McKinney-Vento federal law applies to all
    preschool programs operated by public school
    districts (LEA)
  • Homeless Children are Categorically Eligible,
    even if income exceeds guidelines.
  • Transportation must be provided if other
    children in the program receive it (applies to
    LEA administered Head Start and other pre-K
    programs only)
  • Transportation requirement does NOT apply to
    Head Start programs that are not administered by
    LEAs. However there are collaboration
    provisions regarding ensuring access to Head
    Start programs.

13
Improving Head Start Act 2007 (Reauthorization)
  • Homeless children must be identified and
    prioritized for enrollment. Homeless definition
    McKinney-Vento and includes children awaiting
    foster care placement
  • May enroll without required documents
  • Allocation of funds for expanding existing
    programs considers whether applicants have
    undertaken community-wide planning and needs
    assessment for homeless children
  • Enhances collaboration and coordination with
    children welfare, McKinney-Vento program
    liaisons, etc
  • Expands outreach efforts to include the homeless
  • New standards RE Best Practice

14
Why is Head Start important for Homeless
Children?
  • A randomized control trial of Head Start found
    that Head Start reduced, by almost half, the
    achievement gap in pre-reading skills between
    Head Start children and the national average for
    all 3 and 4 year olds.
  • In another large national survey, researchers
    found that former Head Start students were more
    likely to graduate from high school and to attend
    college than their siblings who attended other
    preschools.
  • The most important factor in breaking the cycle
    of generational poverty is EDUCATION!

15
Strategies for Head Start providers
  • Keep slots open for homeless students
  • Provide awareness training for community
    preschool providers
  • Collaborate with other early care providers
  • Coordinate with IDEA Child Find
  • Know your districts identified Homeless
    Liaisons. Provide enrollment forms and
    informational brochures, send flyers home in
    backpacks of school-aged students.
  • Know your local Pennsylvania Homeless
    Childrens Initiative Regional and/or Site
    Coordinator.
  • Invite McKinney-Vento Coordinators and/or
    District Liaisons to serve on Advisory Councils,
    Boards, Community Assessments.
  • Pool resources to provide cross-training.
  • Utilize LEA enrollment forms to improve
    screening and intake process.

16
Five Steps to Community Assessment A Workbook
for Head Start and Early Head Start Programs
Serving Hispanic and Other Emerging
PopulationsFROM ECLKC (Early Childhood
Knowledge Learning Center) Website
http//eclkc.ohs.acf.hhs.gov
  • Step 1 Plan and Organize
  • the CA team, the CA content, the service area, a
  • time line, tips for getting started
  • Step 2 Design Data Collection
  • the definition of data, different kinds of data,
  • sources of data, developing questions,
    quantitative
  • and qualitative data, visual presentation of the
    data
  • Step 3 Gather Data
  • methods of data collection, guidelines for
    getting
  • started, cultural considerations, large databases
  • Step 4 Review and Analyze
  • what is data analysis, its purpose, how to plan
    data
  • analysis, analytic procedures
  • Step 5 Make Decisions
  • decisions based on the CA data, guidelines for
    recommendations
  • and priorities, trend data, the CA Report

17
Strategies for Identifying Pre-K homeless
children
  • Partner with family shelter agencies (family, DV,
    emergency foster care) to identify young children
  • Develop community awareness of who is eligible
    for services
  • Provide professional development to local early
    childhood education programs and engage their
    agreement to identify children-particularly in
    doubled-up situations
  • Partner with churches and faith-based groups who
    serve families in poverty

18
Resources
  • National Association for the Education of
    Homeless Children and Youth -
  • http//www.naehcy.org
  • National Center on Homeless Education -
  • http//www.serve.org/nche
  • National Law Center on Homelessness Poverty -
  • http//www.nlchp.org
  • Horizons for Homeless Children -
  • http//www.horizonsforhomelesschildren.org
  • Pennsylvanias Homeless Childrens Initiative
  • http//homeless.center-school.org/index.cfm
  • Pennsylvania Department of Education
  • http//www.pde.state.pa.us/
  • Center for Schools and Communities

19
For Assistance Contact
  • Region 1 Philadelphia
    Al Quarles 215.400.6045
  • Region 2 Dauphin, Lebanon, Lancaster,
    Schuylkill, Berks, Chester Beth Rothermel
    610.987.8509
  • Region 3 Huntingdon,. Mifflin, Juniata, Perry,
    Cumberland, Franklin, Adams, York
    Sonia Pitzi 717.843.1128
  • Region 4 Beaver, Allegheny, Washington,
    Westmoreland, Somerset, Bedford, Fulton, Fayette,
    Washington, Greene Gail
    Arden Odorcich 412.3945894
  • State Coordinator
  • Sheldon Winnick 717.783.6468
  • Region 5 Butler, Clarion, Crawford, Erie,
    Forest, Lawrence, Mercer, McKean, Venango, Warren
    Wendy Kinnear - 724.458.6700 (Ext
    289)
  • Region 6 Armstrong, Blair, Cambria, Cameron,
    Centre, Clearfield, Clinton, Elk, Indiana,
    Jefferson, Potter
  • Andrea Sheesley 724.463.5300 (Ext. 1235)
  • Region 7 Bradford, Carbon, Columbia,
    Lackawanna, Lycoming, Luzerne, Montour, Monroe,
    Northumberland, Pike, Snyder Sullivan,
    Susquehanna, Tioga, Union, Wayne, Wyoming
    Lori Conway - 570.718.4613
  • Region 8 Bucks, Delaware, Lehigh, Northampton,
    Montgomery Thomas Norlan - 800.
    770.4822 (Ext. 1361)
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