Young Children in Homeless Families Ensuring Educational Opportunity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Young Children in Homeless Families Ensuring Educational Opportunity

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Young Children in Homeless Families Ensuring Educational Opportunity Diana Bowman National Center for Homeless Education at SERVE 336-315-7453 dbowman_at_serve.org – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Young Children in Homeless Families Ensuring Educational Opportunity


1
Young Children in Homeless FamiliesEnsuring
Educational Opportunity
  • Diana Bowman
  • National Center for Homeless Education at SERVE
  • 336-315-7453
  • dbowman_at_serve.org
  • www.serve.org/nche

2
Challenges related to early childhood and
homelessness
  • Inconsistent and inadequate health care
  • Inadequate nutrition
  • Inadequate or unstable housing
  • Adolescent mothers
  • Disrupted or limited family support
  • Lack of social support network
  • Emotional stress or depression

3
Special needs
  • 54 of children in homeless situations
    experience some form of developmental delay
  • Homeless children are diagnosed with learning
    disabilities twice as often as other children
  • Less than ¼ of children in LA shelters who met
    criteria for SE evaluation actually received
    testing or placement
  • Over ½ of states reported in 2000 that homeless
    students faced barriers accessing SE programs

4
Early childhood programs address developmental
and support issues that challenge homeless
families and children
  • Offer children positive experiences with peers
    and other nurturing adults
  • Bolster parental efficacy with their children
  • Connect families with schools, agencies, and
    service providers
  • Help address developmental delays and
    disabilities early

5
Challenges facing young children in homeless
families related to attending early childhood
programs
  • Lack of preschool availability
  • Waiting lists
  • Lack of awareness of preschools on the part of
    homeless parents
  • Lack of identification of preschool-aged
    children lack of outreach to families, shelters,
    agencies
  • Barriers related to enrollment, attendance,
    transportation, programming
  • Inflexible policies and structures
  • Lack of parent involvement strategies

6
McKinney-Vento ActWho is Homeless?
  • Students who lack a fixed, regular, and adequate
    nighttime residence
  • Living in shelters, hotels, motels, camping
    grounds
  • Living in cars, parks, public spaces, abandoned
    buildings
  • Sharing housing (doubled-up) due to loss of
    housing or economic hardship
  • Migratory children who qualify as homeless

7
What does the McKinney-Vento Act ensure?
  • Immediate enrollment and full participation in
    classes
  • Comparable servicesaccess to programs,
    transportation
  • Attending school with non-homeless children and
    youth
  • Local homeless education liaison in every school
    district

8
How does the McKinney-Vento Act apply to
preschool-aged children?
  • Homeless children have equal access to the same
    public preschool programs
  • Preschool programs administered by SEAs or LEAs
    must comply with all provisions of the Act,
    including provisions on immediate enrollment,
    transportation, and comparable services
  • The State McKinney-Vento plan must describe
    procedures that ensure children who are homeless
    have access to preschool programs
  • LEA liaisons must ensure that families and
    children receive educational services, including
    Head Start, Even Start, and preschool programs
    administered by the LEA

9
How does Title I apply to preschool-aged homeless
children?
  • Title I preschool programs are operated by the
    LEA and must follow the mandates of the
    McKinney-Vento Act
  • An LEA must reserve funds for homeless children
    who do not attend participating Title I schools
    and may provide support services to children in
    shelters and other locations where homeless
    children live
  • An LEA may use reserved funds to provide a
    homeless student with services that are not
    available from other sources

10
How does Head Start apply?
  • The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
    issued a memo in 1992 describing how Head Start
    grantees should collaborate with State Homeless
    Education Coordinators, local liaisons, and
    community agencies and adjust their programs and
    priorities to serve children in homeless
    situations.
  • www.serve.org/nche/downloads/hhs_preschool_memo.
    pdf

11
How does IDEAChild Find apply?
  • States must ensure that all students with
    disabilities residing in the State who need
    special education are identified, located, and
    evaluated.
  • This requirement specifically applies to young
    children experiencing homelessness.

12
Helpful strategies for serving young homeless
children
  • Interagency collaboration/interagency agreements
  • Shared screenings and evaluations
  • Child-centered decision-making
  • Awareness resources throughout the community
  • Staff training
  • Include homelessness as a criteria for priority
    enrollment
  • Provide vouchers for slots
  • Provide transportation
  • Flexible options on tardiness and absences
  • Strong family component outreach to homeless
    parents
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