1 / 41

Recommendations from the Governor’s Task Force on Early Childhood Care and Education

Recommendations from the Governor’s Task Force on Early Childhood Care and Education. Karen McIntyre, Ph.D. CEO and President of the Education Policy and Issues Center Presentation for the Education Policy and Leadership Center Breakfast Forum November 14, 2002 Pittsburgh, PA.

Jims
Download Presentation

Recommendations from the Governor’s Task Force on Early Childhood Care and Education

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. Recommendations from the Governor’s Task Force on Early Childhood Care and Education Karen McIntyre, Ph.D. CEO and President of the Education Policy and Issues Center Presentation for the Education Policy and Leadership Center Breakfast Forum November 14, 2002 Pittsburgh, PA

  2. The Task Force Process • Task Force composed of 34 members representing leaders from both the public and private sector • Business • Foundations • Education • Early Care and Education Providers • Child Advocacy • Faith-Based Organizations • Health Care • Family Services • Communications • Community Organizations • State Officials • Research Consortium – Universities Children’s Policy Collaborative (UCPC)

  3. Task Force Goal • All Pennsylvania children should come to school ready to learn and prepared to succeed ensuring Pennsylvania strong families, a responsible citizenry, and an effective and educated future workforce.

  4. Recommendation A: Leadership and Vision • Gubernatorial leadership • The governor should make school readiness a top administration priority through personal leadership and commitment, by establishing a powerful entity in the governor’s office to align programs of state agencies with this priority and ensure a comprehensive and coordinated approach to implementing the recommendations of the Task Force report.

  5. Recommendation B: Quality Early Care and Education System Components • System Component: Care and Education • Infant and toddlers – A voluntary system of care for infants and toddlers that focuses on health and safety in a developmentally appropriate environment should be developed. • Preschool – Quality preschool should be available, in a variety of settings, to all 3- and 4-year-olds on a voluntary basis and funded beginning with children who are at risk of school failure. • Kindergarten – Kindergarten should be available and funded for all children at age 5 at the choice of their parents, with funding for full-day kindergarten available to school districts for children determined by research to most likely benefit. Consideration should be given to lowering Pennsylvania’s compulsory school age to 6 years old, from its current level of 8 years old.

  6. Recommendation B: Quality Early Care and Education System Components • System Component: Health • Health Services – Preventive and therapeutic health services including physical health, nutrition, behavioral health, oral health, and environmental health services should be available to all children.

  7. Recommendation B: Quality Early Care and Education System Components • System Component: Family Support • Parenting Education – A voluntary and coordinated system of resources and supports should be developed for parents, expectant parents, and those in parenting roles. • Tuition Assistance – Financial support should be made available to families who otherwise could not afford to access high quality, comprehensive early care and education services. Parents should be able to access the most appropriate and highest quality early care and education for their children.

  8. Recommendation C: Foundation Elements for Early Care and Education • High-Quality Standards – Research-based standards of excellence should be adopted through a process that fully engages diverse constituencies for all early care and education services, and quality should be supported through promotion of best practices and continuous quality improvement. • Accountability – An accountability system should be developed for state-funded or regulated early care and education services through a process that fully engages diverse constituencies, with appropriate evaluation mechanisms.

  9. Recommendation C: Foundation Elements for Early Care and Education • Financial Incentives to Achieve and Maintain Quality – A statewide system of financial incentives, building on Keystone Stars, that supports the efforts of all early childhood providers to reach and maintain the standards of excellence should be established.

  10. Recommendation C: Foundation Elements for Early Care and Education • Qualified and Competent Workforce – Quality in the early care and education work force should be improved through: • Pre-service Qualifications – Early care and education professionals should have some minimum level of experience and/or training prior to employment. • Professional Development - Early care and education professionals should receive ongoing professional development, including pre-service and in-service professional development opportunities. • Credentials – A system of credentialing early care and education professionals should be developed. • Compensation - Early care and education professionals should be appropriately compensated and motivated commensurate with their skills and responsibilities.

  11. Recommendation C: Foundation Elements for Early Care and Education • Resource and Referral System – Pennsylvania should enhance its resource and referral system, maintaining a statewide, full-service, comprehensive, and independent resource for parents, providers, businesses, and communities. • Transition Information – Resources should be developed and available to identify the strengths and needs of a child, from birth through age five, to support strong transitions for the child from one setting to another. With parental involvement and informed consent, this information should follow the child from one setting to another and through to school age programs.

  12. Recommendation D: Public Engagement • Public Awareness, Education, Engagement, and Advocacy – Marketing and mobilization approaches should be developed to educate and enlist support for early care and education, including the following: • Parents – A long-term public awareness campaign to encourage parents to take a more active role in learning more about effective parenting. • Public – A long-term public campaign regarding the importance of investing early in the lives of children. • Policymakers – Advocacy strategies to engage, educate, and influence state and local policymakers. • Business, foundations, and community organizations – A conscious and concerted organizational effort to identify, engage, and sustain a diverse cross-section of early childhood advocates in business, foundations, and community organizations.

  13. Early Childhood Task Force: Highlights from the Surveys of Higher Education Institutions and Providers in Pennsylvania Kelly E. Mehaffie, Robert B. McCall, Christina J. Groark, Wendy A. Etheridge, Robert Nelkin University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development and the Universities Children’s Policy Collaborative Presentation for the EPLC Breakfast Forum and Early Literacy Task Force November 14, 2002 Pittsburgh, PA

  14. UCPC Research Studies • The State of Early Childhood Care and Education in Pennsylvania: The 2002 Higher Education Survey (University of Pittsburgh) • A Baseline Report of Early Childhood Care and Education in Pennsylvania: The 2002 Pennsylvania Provider Survey (University of Pittsburgh) • From Science to Policy: Research on Issues, Programs and Policies in Early Childhood Care and Education (University of Pittsburgh) • Benchmarking Early Childhood Care and Education in Pennsylvania: The 2002 Pennsylvania Family Survey (Temple University) • The Pennsylvania Early Childhood Quality Settings Study (Pennsylvania State University— To be released December 2, 2002)

  15. Survey Method • Schools--46% (45 out of 97 schools) of all relevant higher education institutions in Pennsylvania responded • 40% of the programs contacted at those schools responded (67 out of 169)

  16. Survey Method cont. Classified into: • Two disciplines • Early Childhood Education (N=42) • Elementary Education (N=25) • Three degree levels • Certificate/Certification/Associates (N=28) • Bachelors (N=44) • Masters/Doctorate (N=22)

  17. Selected Results • ECE Bachelors Programs provide more training directly relevant to early childhood and kindergarten personnel than do ElEd Bachelors Programs. • More course coverage in early childhood development (e.g., early academic skills, developmental domains, etc.) • More required practicum with 3-5 (91% ECE, 65% ElEd) • More accredited by NAEYC (33% ECE, 15% ElEd) • More faculty trained in early childhood (54% ECE, 13% ElEd)

  18. Selected Results (cont.) • Yet, more than half of the Bachelors graduates going on to teach children birth to five come from Elementary Education programs rather thanEarly Childhood Education programs.

  19. Selected Results (cont.) • More training is needed: • Working with children with disabilities • 96% of centers, preschools, and Head Start have a child enrolled with a disability. • Only 58% ECE and 35% ElEd Bachelors programs required one or more courses on this topic

  20. Selected Results (cont.) • More training is needed: • Working with children with behavior problems • 71% of centers and preschools threatened or actually expelled a child for aggressiveness • Only 25% ECE and 20% ElEd Bachelors programs required one or more courses on this topic

  21. Selected Results (cont.) • More training is needed: • Transition practices • Only half of the centers/preschools engaged in best practices in school transition. • 95% of ECE and only 64% ElEd Bachelors programs required part of a course or one or more courses on this topic.

  22. Selected Results (cont.) • Results specific to Early Literacy: • Percentage of Bachelors programs that require training in earlyliteracyskills (reading, writing) ECE (n=24)ElEd (n=19) No courses 8% 0% Part of one or more 29% 58% One or more entire 63% 42%

  23. Selected Results (cont.) • Results specific to Early Literacy: • Percentage of Bachelors programs that require training in early languageskills ECE (n=24)ElEd (n=19) No courses 4% 0% Part of one or more 50% 75% One or more entire 46% 25%

  24. Selected Results (cont.) • Results specific to Early Literacy: • Percentage of Bachelors programs that require training in early numberskills ECE (n=24)ElEd (n=19) No courses 8% 0% Part of one or more 50% 90% One or more entire 42% 11%

  25. Selected Results (cont.) College/Faculty Infrastructure • 63% of both programs said that the State should grant more funding to schools to increase faculty. • 43% of higher education programs said that attracting and retaining ethnically-diverse faculty was a large problem.

  26. Selected Results (cont.) • It is expensive and difficult for many students to get a Bachelors degree. • Cost of tuition (~$10,000 in tuition and fees per year) • Little scholarship assistance (39% ECE and 20% ElEd get no assistance) • Difficulty repaying student loans (43% ECE, 16% ElEd) • Can’t complete if work full-time (only 21% of ECE and 15% of ElEd can be completed if student works)

  27. Selected Results (cont.) • It is difficult to attract and retain Early Childhood Education graduates. • Even in ECE, only half (50%) of Bachelors graduates take jobs in early childhood including kindergarten • More than one-quarter of the ECE Bachelors graduates that go on to work with children birth to five leave PA

  28. Selected Results (cont.) • Wages are too little for providers to earn • First-year teachers in centers/preschools earn $17,250 • “Big challenges” • Finding qualified staff (50% centers) • Low pay (66% centers, 51% preschools) • Inadequate benefits (64% family, 53% group homes)

  29. Selected Results (cont.) • PA does not meet the National Academy of Sciences recommendation of one teacher/group with a Bachelors degree • Primary staff without Bachelors degree • 42% Preschools/Nursery • 61% Head Start • 78% Child Care Centers • 82% Family homes, group homes, unregulated

  30. Conclusions & Recommendations • Standards of training should be reviewed. • Personnel need training and preparation to work with children with disabilities • More training in handling children’s social-emotional development and behavior problems • More scholarships and loan forgiveness programs

  31. Conclusions & Recommendations (cont.) • Bachelors degree classes should be offered at times students who are employed full-time can take them • Salaries and working conditions in early childhood services need to be improved to attract students and graduates into the field. • Colleges and universities need to train and hire more faculty in early childhood care and education, especially more ethnically diverse faculty.

  32. Reports • Task Force Report: www.state.pa.us • Research Reports: www.pitt.edu/~ocdweb/policy21.htm

  33. Perspectives from a Teacher Educator Rita Bean, Ph.D. University of Pittsburgh Department of Education Presentation for the EPLC Breakfast Forum and Early Literacy Task Force November 14, 2002 Pittsburgh, PA

  34. Perspectives from a Teacher Educator • What do we need in order to build workforce capacity through training and professional development? • We know from research that there is a strong correlation between teachers’ level of education and areas of study with outcomes for children.

  35. Key Findings • Pennsylvania lacks both a well-educated ECE workforce and a well-articulated system to support ECE professional development. • Nearly half of preschools and 80% of childcare centers do not have a teacher with a bachelor’s degree. • No clearly defined, easily accessed,, seamless path where training and education build from one level to the next.

  36. Highlights of Survey of Higher Education Providers • Two programs preparing ECE: Early Childhood Education and Elementary Education • Major problems: • Attracting and retaining ethnically diverse faculty • Attracting and retaining students (limited wages, scholarships, family responsibilities) • Full time employees have difficulty obtaining bachelor’s degree

  37. What Do Graduates of These Programs Do? • Graduates of all programs and degrees are more likely to work in public or private post-kindergarten environments (only ¼ of those with degrees in early childhood education go into preschool/childcare settings). • Majority(2/3) of those who teach kindergarten come from elementary education programs. • Some graduates from elementary education go into early childhood programs.

  38. Implications for Higher Education Institutions • We must be certain that students in EE and in ECE have the knowledge and skills to teach in early childhood education programs. Review programs – • Do students have knowledge/understanding of five essential domains? • What are the competencies for the various certificates/degrees? (including director skills) • Do programs ensure knowledge and skills to work with children with disabilities, to handle social- emotional development and behavioral problems?

  39. Implications • Recruit and find means to retain highly competent individuals in the programs. • Provide more scholarship and loan forgiveness programs. • Create programs that enable students who are employed full-time to obtain their certificate or degree.

  40. Implications • Hire more faculty with expertise in early childhood education, especially more ethnically diverse faculty. • Provide professional development for current faculty in ECE and elementary programs (research findings about young children and how they learn). • Encourage interaction between faculty of the two programs.

  41. Implications • Become involved in professional development efforts in ECE programs. • Partner with ECE and with schools that will receive students (to enhance transition).

More Related