Title: Choosing Headline Indicators
1The State of Florida's Child
- Choosing Headline Indicators
- Florida Children and Youth Cabinet
- July 30, 2009
2Topics today
Topics today
- Where we are with results accountability
- Discussion and selection of priority indicators
- Discussion, timeline and tasks/responsibilities
moving forward
3 Progress to date
We are here sort of!
4Choosing headline indicators
Choosing headline indicators
- Which indicator is most important to change?
- If you had to explain the indicator to your
neighbors and colleagues, is it compelling and
does it make common sense? - Does the indicator measure something that has a
major impact on the result we want?
5 The most important indicators
- Measure the outcomes of a population as a means
of tracking progress toward desired results - Include positive outcomes
- Are predictive of current well-being
- Are predictive of subsequent well-being
6 Guiding concepts for this meeting
- Indicators should tell the extent to which
children have made progress - No more than 3 to 5 headline indicators in each
goal area - Each goal area as important as the other
- Cabinet preference for upstream vs.
downstream indicators - State of the art elusive in ready to learn and
succeed goal area - Hesitancy on indicators from survey data
7 Key premises for this meeting
- Healthy child development
- Prevention-based, family-focused health care
- Young children are affected by parents and
environment - Quality early learning settings
- Stable, nurturing families lead to strong
communities and states - Improved communities lead to improved
developmental outcomes for children
8 Common concepts
- Primary prevention
- Earliest intervention
- Family-centric
- Adult-child relationships
- Environments in which the child lives and learns
- Developmental capacity (capability to perform or
produce) of the child
9Discussion and adoption
Discussion and adoption
- 2 to 3 headline indicators for each goal area
If better is possible, then good isnt
enough. - Emily, who has spina bifida
10Ever
Every Florida child is healthy
- Mothers beginning prenatal care in the first
trimester - Children without health insurance
- Children with a medical home or primary health
care provider (a primary care practice that
provides them with accessible, continuous and
coordinated care) - Children receiving annual preventive dental and
health services
11Every Florida child deserves a stable and
nurturing family
Stable and nurturing families
- Children living in families with income below the
poverty threshold - Child abuse and neglect
- Teen births
12 Safe and supportive communities
- Domestic violence
- Condition of housing
- Homeless children
- Children participating in quality after-school
programs
13 Ready to learn and succeed
- Children at or within 9 of their developmental
capacity - Children read to by their parents and relative
caregivers - Mothers education level
- Births to mothers with less than 12 years of
education - Children in households where the household head
is a high school dropout - Quality early learning settings
- Programs with NAEYC accreditation or that meet
Head Start performance standards - Family child care homes accredited by the
National Association for Family Child Care
(NAFCC)
- Early care-giver training/education
- Early childhood staff with CDA or equivalent
- Early childhood staff with an associates degree
- Early childhood staff with bachelors degree
- Early childhood staff with masters degrees
- Quality VPK
- benchmarks met on NIEER quality standards
checklist (currently 4/10)
14 Floridas report card
Ready to be written!
15The task of the leader is to get people from
where they are to where they have not been.
Henry Kissinger
16Future steps
- September Cabinet meeting
- 2 to 3 years beyond
17History of the indicators
History of the indicators
- What are past trends for priority indicators?
- Why have the trends gone the way they have?
- What is the forecast for priority indicators?
- Do we need more information?
18Where do we want to be?
Where do we want to be?
- What target levels would the state like to see,
and by when?
19What works?
What works
- The State of Floridas Child Report provides
effective, research-based strategies - Which of these would work for us?
20Who are our partners?
Who are our partners?
- What are their roles? How do we engage them and
coordinate progress? - What is each state agency doing to support
improving the outcomes? - What are others doing to support improving the
outcomes? - What is missing?
21Action plans
Action plans
- What we propose to do multi-year
- Community system of services and supports
- Performance measures
- How well programs, services, supports, agencies
and all those included in the action plan are
working
22How do we track progress?
How do we track progress?
23Budget
Budget
- Design analysis
- Scope
- Whats in? Whats out?
- Data assembly and creation of spending database
- Factual reference or policy recommendations?
- Circulate for review, revise, publish and
distribute - Use in executive and legislative branch decision
making processes
24Sample childrensbudget
Desired outcome
25Wand who?hen
When and who?
- SEPTEMBER WORKSHOP
- History of the indicators trends over past
several years - Where do we want to be? - target
- What works to turn the curve in our state? do
we need more information/research? - Who are our partners? What are their roles? How
do we engage them and coordinate progress? - What is each state agency doing to support
improving the outcomes? - What are others doing to support improving the
outcomes? - What is missing?
- Multi-year action plans
- How do we track progress?
- Budget Gay Lancasters committee at work