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FY 2015 Coordinated Family and Community Engagement

FY 2015 Coordinated Family and Community Engagement. Unique Role of CFCE in System of Early Education and Care. Focus : Strengthening the capacity of families to support optimal child development Access : Community-based – in the footprint of families Core functions include:

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FY 2015 Coordinated Family and Community Engagement

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  1. FY 2015 Coordinated Family and Community Engagement

  2. Unique Role of CFCE in System of Early Education and Care • Focus: Strengthening the capacity of families to support optimal child development • Access: Community-based – in the footprint of families • Core functions include: • Reaching families outside the mixed delivery system to engage them in early education opportunities and supports for school readiness and success • Working in partnership with public schools to support families’ successful transition into the public education pipeline

  3. CFCE Fast Facts • Purpose: Provide all families with access to locally available comprehensive services and supports that strengthen families and promote optimal child development. • Current Pool: 96 CFCE grantees • Funding Amounts: $33,870 -$939,037 • Total Funding Amount: $13,665,637 (plus $480,000 available through supplemental)

  4. CFCE Priorities • Universal and Targeted Outreach Strategies -Reaching and meeting the needs of children, especially those with multiple risk factors and/or are hard to reach • Linkages to Comprehensive Services – ensuring that families have access to services that support their families well being and children’s optimal development • Family Education – strengthening the capacity of families as their child’s first teacher through: • child development education (all domains -including social emotional) • evidence-based early literacy and family literacy opportunities • Integration of training content: STEM, Literacy, Brazelton, Strengthening Families, etc. • Transition Supports - Coordinating activities and resources which maximize families’ access to supports promoting successful birth to eight transitions, with specific focus on Kindergarten

  5. Implementation of Priorities:Highlights of Coordinated Family and Community Engagement Monthly Data Reports

  6. Implementation of Priorities: FY 13-14 CFCE RTTT Evidence-based Literacy Grants Data

  7. Creating the FY15 CFCE Plan Internal stakeholders: • EEC regionally based Family and Community Quality Specialists • EEC Policy Unit – linkages across EEC initiatives (i.e. Early English Language Learners guidelines, STEM standards) External Partners: • ESE – connection to public schools, specifically Kindergarten, SPED, and ABE programs • DCF – support for DCF involved families, FRCS • DPH – connection to Massachusetts Home Visiting Initiatives, Early Intervention • Harvard Catalyst – State Home Visiting Evaluator • EOHHS – connection with emerging FRCs Review of Current Literature - impact of family support and engagement

  8. FY15 CFCE Recommendations Priorities and Required Services Remain • Input from stakeholders and research support retention of our priorities • Existing required services, with greater focus and intentionality, support CFCE priorities Changes First ever competitive CFCE grant: • potential for new grantees • service areas may shift • CFCE funding formula • serve all 351 Massachusetts cities and towns, available to all families with continued focus on high needs families • Role of local council • Incorporation of additional performance measures

  9. FY15 CFCE Required Services FY15 Recommendation: Maintain existing required services with changes that reflect greater focus and intentionality Example: CFCE grantees can potentially reduce the numbers of children and families that: • Arrive at Kindergarten unregistered • Arrive at Kindergarten with no prior early childhood experience FY15 CFCE Required Service: Continue to build on partnerships with public schools to support transitions to kindergarten Specific activity: Collaborate with public schools to identify families meeting these criteria and develop a targeted outreach and engagement plan.

  10. FY15CFCE Required Services FY15 Recommendation: Maintain existing required services with changes that reflect greater focus and intentionality All Grantees: • will employ measurement tools to gauge the impact of CFCE programming on families, with specific focus on evidence-based literacy activities. • will plan activities with museums and libraries in their communities to engage families in intentional informal learning opportunities. • will incorporate STEM into parent education and parent/child play group opportunities • that elect to serve multiple communities must ensure that educational activities are offered in locations and tailored to the needs of each community served.

  11. FY15 CFCE Required Services: Role of Local Council • CFCE councils will continue to: • Facilitate linkages between public and private sectors. • Conduct ongoing assessments of community and family needs. • Facilitate collaborative community-wide activities for families with children from birth through school-age. • Collaborate across EEC funded agencies/grantees and other community based programs, in order to build on and foster efficiencies within the local array of services available to children and families. • FY15 Recommendations for Role of Local Council: • CFCE councils will be required to identify and explicitly link to any existing community-based early education and care councils in their service area. • Council membership will reflect representation of Home Visiting and other state funded community initiatives to ensure active engagement and alignment of services and supports to families. • Councils will act in an advisory role to the CFCE grantee.

  12. FY14 Required Services: Parent-Child Home Program • 29 CFCE Grantees have PCHP embedded in their grant programs due to mergers • EEC funds support programming for approximately 650 families in FY14 FY15 Required Services: • CFCEs that elect to serve communities that currently receive PCHP programming will be required to work with the existing PCHP replication site currently serving that community at existing or higher levels of service to high needs families. • Bidders must submit an agreement with the existing PCHP program with their FY15 application which will include the proposed number of families to be served and funding amount.

  13. FY15 CFCE - Service Areas FY15 Recommendations Grantees must: • demonstrate a clear understanding of the gaps and resources in each community served; • maintain a physical presence in communities served; • provide programming in spaces and at times that are easily accessible for families, which could include hotels that shelter homeless families, libraries, in-kind public school or community space, Laundromats, family centers, food pantries, etc., and • must have formal agreements with agencies within service area communities related to space and service delivery.

  14. FY15 CFCE - Funding FY15 provides an opportunity to create a CFCE funding formula based on priorities established by EEC FY14 Funding • Total FY14 Renewal funding = $13,665,637.00 • Supplemental funds (up to $480K) incorporated in CFCE grants for focused work on STEM increased CFCE funding total to $14,145,637 • Grant awards reflect mergers of grant programs and funding formulas based on priorities of former grant programs • Includes a foundational funding amount of $33,870 that supports minimal implementation of required services • Current range of grant funding: $33,870 - $939,037

  15. FY15 CFCE Funding Formula Considerations • All official (351) cities and towns in Massachusetts will be served. This is consistent with other EEC grants. • No existing grantee will be reduced by more than 5%. If existing grantees choose their identical service areas in 2014, they will not experience more than a 5% reduction • Exceptions: some communities have been served by more than one CFCE grantee. In FY15, only one grantee will be selected to serve a city or town.  There will be no overlap. • At a minimum, the FY14 base amount of $33,870 will be protected for existing service areas. • Align funding to priorities reflected in other EEC grant formulas

  16. Funding Formula Options Option A: Factors • 3 data elements: children 0-14, families and high risk – consistent with elements used for EPS and MH • Communities that were not served in FY14 would receive a minimal amount of $4000+ in funding as a starting point for their inclusion in the grant. • Base amount of =>$33,870 per existing FY14 service area is protected

  17. FY15 CFCE High Risk Factor MHVI Needs Assessment ranked communities using 30 specific indicators, which included: • Premature births • Low-birth-weight infants • Infant mortality • Adequacy of prenatal care • High school drop-outs • Early Intervention enrollment • Poor performing schools • Children waitlisted for EEC subsidized slot • Child maltreatment 15 Substance Use Disorder • Infants born to mothers with less than high school education • Teen births • Incarcerated parents • Violent crimes • Poverty • Unemployment • Mothers giving birth receiving publicly-financed health care • Students whose 1st language is not English • Limited English proficiency • Foreign born mothers • Refugees and Immigrants Source - Massachusetts Evidence-Based Home Visiting Program: Needs Assessment -Data Indicator Definitions and Sources Used in Community Risk Ranking http://www.mass.gov/eohhs/docs/dph/com-health/homevisiting/2010-hv-na-appendix-c.pdf

  18. Funding Formula Options Option B: Factors • 2 data elements: children 0-14, families • No risk factors • Communities that were not served in FY14 would receive $4000+ in funding as a starting point for their inclusion in the grant. •  Base amount of =>$33,870 per FY14 existing service area is protected

  19. FY15 CFCE Funding Recommendations: • Option A Funding Formula – including high needs factor • Ensure that existing grantees that choose their FY14 service area for FY15 will experience no more than a 5% reduction (with exceptions – slide 15) • Establish 3 year grant cycle – next competitive bid in FY18 would continue to reflect movement toward alignment with funding formula priorities

  20. FY15 CFCE: Multiple Funding Streams • State Funds –$14,145,637 • RTT-ELC Evidence-based Grant Funds: $400,000

  21. FY15 CFCE - Appendices

  22. CFCE Funding History • FY10 - $15,180,421.00 Funding represented a merger of EEC funding from: • Line Item 3000-6000 Community Partnerships for Children Local Planning and Coordination $10,114,569 • Line Item 3000-4060 Supplemental Services $1,374,776 • Line Item 3000-7050 Family Engagement and Support (MFN,PCHP and JFSP) $3,691,076 • FY11 - $14,521,328.00 • To address the FY11 funding reduction, EEC implemented a three-tiered approach, applying the reduction at a higher rate to higher funded agencies ; protecting low funding amounts believing that a reduction would impact the ability of the agency to carry out the CFCE mission.  • FY12 - $13,665,637.00 EEC raised the base grant amount ($33,870 ) to support core functions, and implemented this funding adjustment and the FY12 funding reduction by creating a formula incorporating the following criteria to FY11 grantees with grant awards of 100K or higher*: • Level 4 school district • DPH Community – Home Visiting Task Force data • 50% or higher child poverty rate • FY13 - $13,665,637.00 • FY14 - $13,665,637.00 (plus supplemental) *Reduction percentages were applied based on the number of criteria grantees met. The more criteria met, the lower the percentage of reduction applied. 22

  23. Background: Coordinated Family and Community Engagement • FY2010 – First year of CFCE grant - CPC, MFN, PCHP and JFSP programs were asked to voluntarily consolidate their programs into CFCE grants (CPC was mandatory). • This consolidation resulted in 120 CFCE grantees representing 137 CPC, 34 MFN , 22 PCHP , and 11 JFSP programs • 71 CPC, 8 MFN and 3 PCHP programs did not apply in consolidation with other programs. • Grantees that did not consolidate made a commitment to continuing to work toward that goal for FY2011. • FY2011 –All independent MFNs (8) and PCHP programs (3) were required to merge with an existing CFCE grantee or submit a new CFCE application for FY ’11. • Mergers in FY11 resulted in a total of 110 CFCE grantees. • FY2012 – Additional mergers resulted in 107 CFCE grantees • FY2013 – Four existing grantees did not renew and one grantee merged four grants. Four of the non-renewal grants were awarded to existing CFCE grantees through a competitive process. These mergers resulted in 99 CFCE grantees. • FY2014 – Three existing grants merged with other CFCE grantees, resulting in 96 CFCE grantees. 23

  24. FY14 CFCE Enhancements Increased focus in the following areas: • Outreach strategies • for using the ASQ to support parents understanding of the developmental needs of children at multiple points • for early literacy programming • Methods for maintaining up-to-date community resource information and documentation of gaps in comprehensive services • Methods for measuring satisfaction with CFCE services • Explicit linkages of parent/child playgroup goals to early learning standards • Intentional partnerships with public school elementary schoolsfor 3 years (for child find) and 5 year olds (for kindergarten entry) and 5 to 8 (for out of school opportunities.) • Detailed reporting on early literacy programming

  25. FY 13-14 CFCE ImplementationRTTT-ELC: Expanding Evidence-based Literacy Opportunities • CFCE Grantees responded to a Request for Information (RFI) in which they proposed the use of an evidence-based model/practice that would build on their existing early literacy programming. • EEC reviewed the information and selected five models/practices that would be eligible for RTTT-ELC funding: • Raising A Reader • Every Child Ready to Read @ your library • CELL (Center for Early Literacy Learning) model • Read and Rise (Scholastic model), and • Dialogic and Interactive reading using PEER and CROWD sequences. • Existing CFCE grantees were eligible to respond to a competitive Evidence-based Literacy Grant opportunity. • Twenty–four grants were awarded • RTTT-ELC funding allocation – total of $400,000 each year for two years - $800,000

  26. FY14 CFCE Implementation of ASQ with RTTT SupportAges and Stages Questionnaire Statistics Data from ASQ Online Database • Total numbers since July 2011 (data collected 11/26/13): • 1673 online child profiles have been created • 1978 ASQ-3 screenings have been entered into online database • Most ASQ-3 & ASQ-SE screenings occurred at 36 months • All ASQ-3 intervals between 12 and 60 months had a 50% rate of possible concern/concern Data from ASQ Hardcopy Screenings (data collected 11/26/13) • For FY13, 2,729 children were screened, including 2,249 paper screenings Total Screenings for FY14 (Collected 11/26/13) • FY14 had 297 children screened, 222 of them with paper screenings

  27. FY14 CFCE Implementation: Capacity Building Opportunities RTTT-ELC Funded Opportunities • Financial Literacy training – new hybrid model online and in-person with community partners • DMH- Infant Mental Health • ORI- New Start: Supporting Multilingual Children and Immigrant and Refugee Families • Museums and Libraries Partnership for Parent, Family and Community Engagement – STEM, Literacy, Kindergarten Readiness • Conferences • A View From All Sides: Multidisciplinary Perspectives on Parenting Education & Family Support (CTF) • Ongoing Advanced Learning Opportunities • CFCE Statewide Meetings – Brain Building, ASQ • Communities of Practice Meetings • STEM Summit • Creating Access to Partners • Regional Grantee Meetings

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