A Presentation at the 2013 QRIS National Meeting Camille Catlett Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute (NC) Ola Friday NY Early Childhood Professional.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
2-1 Chapter 2: Preschool English Learners, Their Families and Their Communities ©2012 California Department of Education, Child Development Division with.
Advertisements

Highlighting Parent Involvement in Education
Collaborating with Families: Partnering for Success
Research Findings and Issues for Implementation, Policy and Scaling Up: Training & Supporting Personnel and Program Wide Implementation
3 High expectations for every child
1 Family-Centred Practice. What is family-centred practice? Family-centred practice is characterised by: mutual respect and trust reciprocity shared power.
2-1 Chapter 2: Preschool English Learners, Their Families and Their Communities ©2014 California Department of Education (CDE) with the WestEd Center for.
Families as Partners in Learning What does this mean Why does it matter? Why should we care? How do we do it?
Continuity and Change in Early Childhood Education
1 When DAP Meets GAP Promoting Peaceful Coexistence between Developmentally Appropriate Practice & the Need to Address the Achievement Gap National Association.
Creating National Guidance on Response to Intervention in Early Childhood: Updates on the DEC/NAEYC/NHSA Joint Position Statement Camille Catlett Virginia.
Camille Catlett Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute DVAEYCFriday, April 12, 2013 Full Participation: Strategies for.
Reducing Child Welfare Involvement: The Promise and Limitations of Early Intervention Deborah Daro.
Benchmarking Effective Educational Practice Community Colleges of the State University of New York April, 2005.
BENCHMARKING EFFECTIVE EDUCATIONAL PRACTICE IN COMMUNITY COLLEGES What We’re Learning. What Lies Ahead.
Dina C. Castro, M.P.H., Ph.D. Scientist, FPG Child Development Institute, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 15 th Annual Summer Public Health.
Matt Moxham EDUC 290. The Idaho Core Teacher Standards are ten standards set by the State of Idaho that teachers are expected to uphold. This is because.
Families as Partners in Learning Principals and teaching staff Session #1: Why are partnerships important?
PARENT, FAMILY, AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
Moving From Parts to a Whole Tools That Unite Partners Around A Whole Child Vision Youth in the Middle Jessica Cameron Project Manager, Whole Child Initiative.
Office of Child Development & Early Learning | Touching Hearts, Changing Minds Parents as Professional Development.
New Voices/Nuevas Voces Program: Addressing Cultural and Linguistic Diversity in Early Childhood Education and Intervention Betsy Ayankoya Dina Castro.
Camille Catlett Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute Chapel Hill, NC Building Policies and Practices that Support Each Child Skill-Building.
Focusing on Diverse Young Learners in State Quality Rating and Improvement Systems Dan Haggard & Alejandra Rebolledo Rea New Mexico Department of Children,
Unprecedented Opportunities New Challenges Diverse Perspectives M.-A. Lucas, Executive Director, Early Care and Education Consortium 2015 ECEC Invest in.
Types of Leadership Situational Leadership Transformational Leadership Servant Leadership Directive Leadership.
March 2010 what the school readiness data mean for Harford County’s children ©
Culturally Competent Services: Why is Your Leadership Needed?
ELIZABETH BURKE BRYANT MAY 9, 2012 Building a Solid Foundation for Governors’ Education Reform Agendas through Strong Birth-to-3 rd Grade Policies.
Coaching for School Readiness
Resources to Support the Use of DEC’s Recommended Practices This presentation and handout were developed by Camille Catlett.
Families as Partners in Learning Principals and teaching staff Why are partnerships important?
Petra Engelbrecht Stellenbosch University South Africa
BURLINGTON-EDISON SCHOOL DISTRICT APRIL 7 TH, 2014 Highlighting Parent Involvement in Education.
1 Embed or show Video 1.3 CRAFT here. Cause to Pause Find someone in the room you don’t know well Introduce yourself Discuss: What does the content you.
Resources for Supporting Engagement for Each and Every Family 1.
Coming Together for Young Children and Families.  What we know  Where we have been  Where we are today  Where we need to go.
A Presentation at NAEYC 2013 Professional Development Institute Camille Catlett FPG Child Development Institute (NC) Debi Mathias QRIS National Learning.
Parent Engagement May 4, 2011 Gaye Horne Spring Institute
Harvard Family Research Project Complementary Learning and Out-of-School Time: Promise, Problem and Challenges Harvard Family Research Project.
The Link Between Thriving Children and Economic Security: Creating Equity in Early Childhood for Our Common Good.
Overview of National Trends & Influences Camille Catlett National Professional Development Center on Inclusion FPG Child Development Institute University.
Children Entering School Ready to Learn The Maryland School Readiness Report what the school readiness data mean for Maryland’s children.
Camille Catlett Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute Chapel Hill, NC The Real Early Learning Challenge Meeting the Needs of Each and Every Child.
The Achievement Gap and Equal Educational Opportunity Presented by July & Linda July 23, 2004.
Early Childhood and Diversity in Iowa: Challenges and Opportunities Setting the Context Charles Bruner September 26, 2007.
Creating a jigsaw for early learning: developing high quality teaching and learning programs for K-3 classrooms Jean Rice September 2008.
Camille Catlett Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute GAYCFriday, October 11, 2013 High Quality Inclusion: Evidence-based.
Supports for the Inclusion of Children of Diverse Abilities in Early Childhood Settings Camille Catlett Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute.
NAEYC Developmentally Appropriate Practice in Early Childhood Programs Key Messages and Implication.
Camille Catlett Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute Resources, Tools, and Strategies for Supporting Each Child’s Full Participation and Inclusion.
Resources for Supporting Engagement for Each and Every Family 1.
Foundations and Best Practices in Early Childhood Education: History, Theories, and Approaches to Learning, 2 nd Edition © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.
Hosted by Northampton Community College Supported by SCRIPP (Supporting Change and Reform in Inclusive Personnel Preparation) U.S. Department of Education.
STANDARD 4 & DIVERSITY in the NCATE Standards Boyce C. Williams, NCATE John M. Johnston, University of Memphis Institutional Orientation, Spring 2008.
Getting to Know the Eight Overarching Principles Unit 1 - Key Topic 2
Strategies for Achieving Broad-based Diversity ADD Perspectives Jennifer G. Johnson, Ed.D.
Why should you care about diversity?. 2 There are significant disparities in the education, economic well- being, and health of children in the U.S. based.
Camille Catlett Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute Montgomery County Infants and Toddlers Program Kick-Off October.
Students will need more than just good teachers and smaller class sizes to meet the challenges of tomorrow. For students to get the most out of school,
Baltimore County Public Schools’ Office of Equity and Assurance in collaboration with: Department of Professional Development World Languages Special Education.
Children Entering School Ready to Learn The Maryland School Readiness Report what the school readiness data mean for Maryland’s children.
Meeting the LEAPS Act May 5, PEI: Building Rigorous and Robust PreK-3 Family Engagement 1.
Camille Catlett Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute National Smart Start Conference May 4, 2016 Family Engagement:
Defining 21st Century Skills: A Frameworks for Norfolk Public Schools NORFOLK BOARD OF EDUCATION Fall 2009.
Diversity and ECE.
QRIS and Beyond Improving Quality for the Neediest Kids
Camille Catlett and Megan Vinh
Resources to Support Your Work
Presentation transcript:

A Presentation at the 2013 QRIS National Meeting Camille Catlett Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute (NC) Ola Friday NY Early Childhood Professional Development Institute

Who’s here? What perspective(s) do you bring to our conversation? PD provider (training, technical assistance, higher education) Administrator Other?

3

4 There are significant disparities in the education, economic well-being, and health of children in the U.S. based on their race-ethnicity and whether or not their parents are immigrants 1 When it comes to education, all groups of U.S. children were found to be at risk, regardless of their race-ethnicity and whether their parents were born in the U.S. Rates of reading and math proficiency were critically low across the board; the lowest rates were for Hispanic and black children. Findings

Before entering kindergarten, the average cognitive scores of preschool- age children in the highest socio- economic group are 60% above the average scores of children in the lowest socioeconomic group. 2 Disparities in child outcomes between poor, at-risk, and more advantaged children are evident in cognitive, social, behavioral, and health outcomes as early as 9 months and grow larger by 24 months of age. 3

Nearly seven out of every 1,000 pre-kindergarteners are expelled each year—an estimated 5,117 preschoolers in all. The rate is 3.2 times higher than the national expulsion rate for children in grades K Boys are expelled 4.5 times more than girls; and African-Americans are twice as likely to be expelled as Latino and Caucasian kids and more than five times as likely as Asian-American kids. 4

Dual language learners are heavily overrepresented among low-achieving students (within the bottom 5% – 25% of the achievement distribution) and severely underrepresented among high achievers (within the top 5% - 25% of the achievement distribution). 5 7

Children form academic trajectories early in their school careers that tend to be stable and difficult to change over the course of their schooling 6 Children’s negative perceptions of competence and attitudes become stronger and harder to reverse as children progress through school 7

Research suggests that both preservice and inservice EC teacher preparation have failed to prepare educators who can effectively teach children for whom English is a new language or second dialect, children of color, children of diverse abilities, and children from economically marginalized communities 8 Examine Professional Development )

A recent study revealed that few states include measures of cultural or linguistic competency of child care programs in their QRIS and these measures sometimes only apply to programs at the highest quality rating. 9 10

 Louise Stoney’s analysis of trends & challenges related to QRIS priorities addressed in the 35 state applications for RTT-ELC (2012) noted the “need for greater cultural competence and workforce diversity” as well as PD and supports in multiple languages.  Only one state was cited for focused attention to children with disabilities Perspectives from Round 1 RTT-ELC applications

All Each & Every

BUILD Diversity Learning Table March – August 2012

Sample Diversity Learning Table Session

Questions for Examining the Intentionality of Your Approaches

Do your policies reflect your intentionality?

What messages do your words convey? Family as a broader term Person first language (child with a disability instead of disabled child)

New NAEYC Standards for Professional Preparation Programs 11 Significant Changes in the 2009 Standards The language all children is revised to read each child or every child to strengthen the integration of inclusion and diversity as threads across all standards. In some cases, the phrase “each child” has been added to a key element of a standard. 19

Have you established policies related to cultural and linguistic diversity? We believe that... Learning about and respecting differences among people are promoted when children have many opportunities to play and interact with classmates of different racial and cultural backgrounds and varying abilities.

Resources for Building Policies That Support Each Young Child

Cultural/Linguistic Responsiveness Programs are responsible for creating a welcoming environment that respects diversity, support children’s ties to their families and communities, and promote both second language and preservation of children’s home languages and cultural identities. Linguistic and cultural diversity is an asset, not a deficit, for young children. 12

Resources from

Ask yourself...  Do your efforts have an explicit and intentional emphasis on young children who are culturally diverse (includes racial, ethnic, socio-economic, and other aspects of diversity)?  Do your efforts have an explicit and intentional emphasis on young children who are dual language learners?  Do your efforts have an explicit and intentional emphasis on young children with disabilities and inclusion?  Do you have agreed upon definitions of key terms to use in your work (e.g., cultural competence, inclusion)?  Do you have guiding principles to underscore your shared commitment to families in all aspects of your work?  Have they been developed collaboratively with families?

Do your family engagement standards and efforts reflect your intentionality?

Higher preschool performance and promotion to next grade 13,14 More positive engagement with peers, adults, and learning 15 Buffers negative impact of poverty on academic and behavioral outcomes 16 Engage Families to Help Children Succeed

Effective Models of Family Engagement Emphasize a reciprocal relationship (not one-sided) Take a partnership approach to children’s learning, in which both programs and families collaborate Emphasize respect for families and a value for their expertise Promote two-way communication and co- planning

Recent research has found changes in teachers’ negative beliefs about Latino and other immigrant families after having direct contact and experiences with these families in their communities. 17 How are your family engagement efforts growing the capacity of teacher to welcome and support each family?

Resources for Supporting Engagement of Each and Every Family

Learning Table Session on Family Engagement

Resources for Supporting Engagement for Each and Every Family 31

Resources for Supporting Engagement for Each and Every Family 32