1 / 40

First 5 Kern Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010-2011

First 5 Kern Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010-2011. Presented By JIANJUN “JJ” WANG, Ph.D. Focuses of the Annual Report. 1. Meet state requirements to justify the return on state investment Results-Based Accountability: Identify what works for whom in which context.

Download Presentation

First 5 Kern Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010-2011

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. First 5 Kern Annual Report Fiscal Year 2010-2011 Presented By JIANJUN “JJ” WANG, Ph.D.

  2. Focuses of the Annual Report • 1. Meet state requirements to justify the return on state investment • Results-Based Accountability: Identify what works for whom in which context. • 2. Facilitate program improvement • “Define success as turning the curve away from the baseline or beating the baseline” (Friedman, 2005, p. 58) – It is particularly important when decrease of the state revenue seems inevitable (as tobacco consumptions dwindle down).

  3. What Works: Fact Finding, Outcome Assessment, and Trend Evaluation • Descriptive Data to Count Service Outputs • # of Children Born with Low Birth Weight • # of Mothers Involved in Breastfeeding • # of Families with Insurance Coverage • Assessment of Service Outcomes “Not everything that counts can be counted, and not everything that can be counted counts.” -- Albert Einstein • Analysis of Variable Relations

  4. State-Recommended Evaluation Framework • Three levels of data will be collected, evaluated and reported on in order to provide answers to different categories of questions. These levels include: • Descriptive data; • Outcome data; and • Data produced through applied social research methods. (First 5 California, 2005, p. 5)

  5. Structure of the Report • Chapter 1: First 5 Kern Overview • Chapter 2: Impact of First 5 Kern-Funded Programs • Chapter 3: Effectiveness of Service Integration • Chapter 4: Turning the Curve • Chapter 5: Conclusions and Future Directions

  6. Fact Finding: Descriptive Results on Service Counts • Sormano and Neville-Morgan (2009) pointed out, “Data is more compelling when aggregated” (p. 18). • In the Health and Wellness area, the number of funded programs increased from eight in the last year to 11 this year. • Five new programs have been added to the Parent Education and Support Services area, making a total of 18 funded programs this year. • Approximately $1 million were added to expand services in Early Childcare and Education.

  7. Programs Highlighted in the State Report • Programs covered in the local report to the state: • Community Action Partnership of Kern 2-1-1 program • Bakersfield Adult School Health Literacy Program • Delano School Readiness Initiative • Indian Wells Valley Family Resource Center • Children’s Health Initiative • Successful Application Stipend • GBLA’s Domestic Violence Reduction Project.

  8. Fact Finding: Health and Wellness Figure 5: Relation Between Low Birth Weight and Family Income

  9. Fact Finding: Health and Wellness Figure 6: Lack of Regular Dental Checking in Single Parent Families

  10. Outcome Assessment: Health and Wellness Figure 11: Parental Respect

  11. Outcome Assessment: Health and Wellness Figure 12: Peer Respect

  12. Outcome Assessment: Health and Wellness Figure 13: Attention Span

  13. Fact Finding: Parent Education and Support Services Figure 19: Trend of Resolving Immigration Barriers

  14. Fact Finding: Parent Education and Support Services Figure 20: Trend of Expanding Insurance Coverage

  15. Outcome Assessment: Parent Education and Support Services Figures 21 & 22: Change of Parent Beliefs on Child Fearing Arvin Shafter

  16. Outcome Assessment: Parent Education and Support Services Figure 25: Improvement of Substance Abuse Condition Through Parent Education

  17. Fact Finding: Balance Service Coverage in Kern County (Figures 27 & 28) Results of ASQ-3 36th Month Assessment Focus Area 2

  18. Outcome Assessment: Early Childcare and Education (Table 10 reference)

  19. Outcome Assessment: Early Childcare and Education Figure 30: Early Education Programs Do a Good Job

  20. Outcome Assessment: Early Childcare and Education Figure 33: Invariant Language Combinations across Ages 4 and 5

  21. Outcome Assessment: Early Childcare and Education (Figure 35)

  22. Outcome Assessment: Early Childcare and Education (Table 12)

  23. Fact Finding: Outreach Activities Across Programs (Table 14)

  24. Fact Finding: Integration of Services Across Programs Figure 38: Referrals to Enhance Service Accessibility in the Local Context

  25. Fact Finding: Integration of Services Across Programs Figure 40: Proportion of Coordinated Services Across Different Funding Levels

  26. Outcome Assessment: Integration of Services Across Programs Figure 45: Translation Services Across Different Funding Levels

  27. Outcome Assessment: Integration of Services Across Programs Figure 51: Effectiveness of Integration Services

  28. Outcome Assessment: Integration of Services Across Programs Figure 53: Increase of Program Visibility Through Local Partnerships

  29. Trend Evaluation: Effect of “Turning the Curve” Since 2009 (Table 17)

  30. Trend Evaluation: Effect of “Turning the Curve” Since 2009 (Table 18)

  31. Trend Evaluation: Effect of “Turning the Curve” Since 2009 (Table 19)

  32. Trend Evaluation: Effect of “Turning the Curve” Since 2009 (Table 20)

  33. Trend Evaluation: Effect of “Turning the Curve” Since 2009 (Table 21)

  34. Trend Evaluation: Effect of “Turning the Curve” Since 2009 (Table 22)

  35. Trend Evaluation: Effect of “Turning the Curve” Since 2009 • Additional results are available in the annual report, including: • More nursery school attendance for children after age 3; • Fewer children were exposed to cigarette smoke; • More children received all shots recommended by doctors; • More children being read to twice or more times per week.

  36. Conclusions • Based on the results from fact-finding, outcome assessment, and trend evaluation, First 5 Kern, through its funded partners, has: • Extended the current longitudinal data gathering beyond the annual monitoring of First 5 Kern performance; • Incorporated more explanatory and outcome variables to justify the Results-Based Accountability (RBA) on each Result Indicator (see the next slide); • Strengthened its leadership role in the area of service integration.

  37. Additional Information fromProgram-Specific Instruments • Program-Specific Instruments include: 1. Anger Management Assessment 2. Be Choosey Be Healthy 3. Child Assessment Summer Bridge 4. Comprehensive Need Assessment 5. Eyberg Child Assessment 6. Incredible Years Parenting Scale 7. Richardson’s Student Behavior Assessment 8. School Readiness Articulation Survey 9. Substance Abuse Assessment

  38. Introduction to New Recommendations Statement from Kris Perry, Executive Director, First 5 California Regarding First 5 California Project Legacy Due to declining revenues, First 5 California can no longer fund programs at their current levels. We anticipated this situation and are prepared to address it in a fair and equitable manner. Our aim is to fulfill the objectives of our strategic plan, be responsible stewards of tax dollars and help ensure all children enter school ready to achieve their greatest potential. To accomplish this, we created First 5 California Project Legacy to serve as a “Roadmap to the Future” by establishing two to three Signature Programs and innovative Pilot Projects for children 0 to 5 and their families.

  39. Introduction to New Recommendations • Three Signature Programs identified by the State Commission: • a child program • a parent program • a teacher program Source: http://www.ccfc.ca.gov/Help/program_development.asp

  40. New Recommendations 1. Identify/develop “signature programs” through a balanced consideration between the existing partners with exemplary track records and new partners with strong potential to deliver groundbreaking services; 2. Collect timely feedback from service providers to enhance performance tracking; 3. Invite input from service providers on additional evidences that should have been gathered to represent their outcome-based contributions.

More Related