The Worth of Children’s Programs

Tuesday, June 07th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

As policymakers debate the merits of the best approach to improve children’s academic success, they would be well served by reading an op-ed published today in the News Observer. Duke University researchers remind us that “research scientists like ourselves can be helpful in sorting out the effectiveness of strategies that have been implemented to achieve common goals.”

They note that “over the past two decades, to realize the goal of improving children’s academic success, North Carolina has tried a strategy of investing in the first five years of life.” They are referring to Smart Start and More at Four. Kenneth Dodge, Helen Ladd, and Claire Muschkin from Duke studied these programs, asking “Do these programs work? Have they made our children better off academically?” The answer was emphatically yes. They write:

“We have analyzed data on educational outcomes for third graders over the past 12 years and find that children who were lucky enough to be born into a county at a time that it received financial support for these programs perform better in third grade than children born into that county at a time when it received less funding for these programs.

‘Perform better’ means higher average third-grade standardized test scores in reading and mathematics and fewer placements into special education for problem performance.

How much better? About a half year of schooling and 15 percent fewer special education placements. In the world of education, that is a lot better

Who benefits from these programs? The benefits we identify include not only those to children who directly participate in the programs, but to others as well. All children of a target age in a county benefit by increased standards for child care, curricula and preschool teacher qualifications. Furthermore, imagine a kindergarten classroom where more children begin the year ready to learn. The teacher will spend less time managing behavior problems and remediating children who are way behind, and more time teaching the entire group of children. Everyone benefits.

Some have asked whether both of these programs are needed. Could the state cut one program and get just as much benefit by continuing the other program?

Our findings indicate no. Each program generates a unique benefit, and the two programs yield twice as much benefit as one program.”

The researchers conclude, “The proposed state budget cuts these early childhood programs by more than 20 percent. Our analyses of the data indicate that the current level of funding for both these programs is well worth the investment.”

We need to encourage our elected officials to base their decision on the facts. Please forward this op-ed to your networks!

Read the op-ed.

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Survey Shows Protecting Children’s Programs in the Federal Budget is Voters’ Top Priority

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

A poll released today reveals strong public support for protecting federal investments that benefit children. In a battery of survey questions identifying a series of potential cuts that Congress may consider in the broader budget debate, the survey finds that voters are more likely to hold harmless programs affecting kids than any other programs on the chopping block.

Furthermore, results from the survey reveal cuts to programs affecting kids prove just as unpopular as cuts affecting seniors. In fact, voters are as likely to oppose reductions in Medicaid as in Medicare. Voters also are more concerned about protecting children’s programs than a variety of other federal programs, such as transportation funding for highway construction, national defense, and medical and scientific research.

“The American people are sending a message that is loud and clear: don’t cut kids,” said Bruce Lesley, President of First Focus, the bipartisan child advocacy organization that commissioned the survey. “Many recent spending proposals have sacrificed the needs of children in order to protect the interests of others. However, results from this survey prove that protecting programs that improve the well-being of children is immensely important to voters. We urge policymakers to heed the priorities of their constituents by holding children harmless as they work to find solutions to our nation’s budget challenges.”

Key findings from the survey include:

  • Voters believe children in America fare poorly. By a margin of 58-20 percent, or by almost a 3:1 margin, a majority of voters believe that the lives of children in America have gotten worse rather than better in the last ten years, including a quarter (26 percent) who believe children’s lives have gotten much worse.Republican voters are the most concerned, as they believe the lives of children are worse by a margin of 62-16 percent, an almost 4:1 margin.
  • Children’s programs are most important to voters relative to other potential program cuts. When provided a battery of potential cuts some have considered in the budget debate, voters clearly protect children. In fact, the least popular cuts all directly affect children, including cuts to federal child nutrition programs, Head Start, k-12 education, CHIP, among others. When asked whether the following programs should receive no reduction, a minor reduction, or a major reduction, American voters responded as follows (see Figure 1).
  • Voters strongly oppose the more than $750 billion in proposed cuts to Medicaid and funding shortfall created in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) included in the House Budget Committee proposal. By a 70-27 percent margin, the majority of American voters oppose the cuts to Medicaid and, by a 73-23 percent margin, Americans oppose the proposed cuts to CHIP (51 percent strongly oppose). This includes opposition to the Medicaid and CHIP cuts by margins of 66-30 percent and 67-26 percent, respectively, in Republican congressional districts. Voters also oppose, by a 2:1 margin, a plan to provide governors more flexibility if it meant eliminating insurance coverage for some children (31 percent favor, 63 percent oppose).
  • Cutting programs is not the only option. Voters support other options for reducing the deficit. A 72 percent majority describe eliminating loopholes and federal subsidies to corporations as acceptable, 63 percent accept eliminating the Bush tax cuts for families earning over $250,000 a year, and 64 percent oppose the Ryan plan to lower the top tax bracket by a third. Furthermore, when presented with a range of suggestions for dealing with the deficit, voters support raising taxes on those earning over $1 million a year rather than cutting important programs by a 72-21 percent margin.
  • When provided context, voters oppose the House Budget Committee proposal. Less than half of voters (45 percent) support a “proposed budget for the next 10 years that will cut 6.2 trillion from the federal budget deficit.” When provided a fuller and fair description of the details of the plan, support sinks, 37 percent favor, 56 percent oppose.

The telephone survey, completed during the period of April 13-18, 2011, was commissioned by First Focus and conducted by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, using a national probability sample of 1,023 likely 2012 voters. In order to better reflect the changing lifestyle of the voting population, the survey also includes a sample of 114 cell phone interviews. The survey’s margin of error is +/- 3.10 points at 95 percent confidence interval.

Review a summary of the poll’s key findings
Read a press release about this poll

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Smart Start in Action

Monday, April 25th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

 

Lucy Daniels Center and Smart Start from Together NC on Vimeo.

North Carolinians understand that the future of our state depends on ensuring that our young children birth to five have the early intervention and quality education to succeed in kindergarten and beyond.

That’s why our General Assembly created Smart Start, our nationally-recognized infrastructure for early childhood education.

Through 77 local partnerships that serve all 100 counties, Smart Start serves hundreds of thousands of children every year. Smart Start’s success has been verified repeatedly in more than 37 independent studies, including a recent Duke University study that showed that Smart Start increases third grade test scores and reduces the need for special education.

Investments in quality early child education pay off and Nobel-prize winning economist James Heckman has found that such investments yield higher returns than those in higher education or job training.

If you’re concerned about the fate of Smart Start and other public investments, visit http://www.speaknc.org/2011/04/lucy-daniels-center-and-smart-start/.org to learn more.

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Law enforcement urging policymakers to support high-quality early care and education

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

Law enforcement leaders across the country as part of  Fight Crime: Invest in Kids are urging policymakers to support high-quality early care and education. There is strong evidence that these programs can help at-risk children succeed, reduce the likelihood that they will commit crimes and save taxpayer dollars by lowering prison costs. High-quality early education can keep children from ever starting down the expensive path leading to prison. Research shows:

  • By age 27, those left out of the high-quality Perry Preschool Project in Michigan were five times more likely to be chronic offenders than those who participated, and by age 40 those left out were 86 percent more likely to have been sentenced to jail or prison.
  • By age 18, those left out of the Chicago Child-Parent Center pre-kindergarten program were already 70 percent more likely to be arrested for a violent crime.• While high-quality state pre-kindergarten programs do not yet have crime results, they are already helping kids succeed. For example: by second grade, the children left out of New Jersey’s pre-kindergarten program were twice as likely to be held back in school.
  • For every child who drops out of school, uses drugs and becomes a career criminal, he or she costs society, on average, $2.5 million over a lifetime. To prevent such costs, Nobel Economist James Heckman and Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke agree that high-quality early education is essential for our economic future. Law enforcement leaders are telling policymakers that high-quality early education can play a critical role in building strong and safe communities.

Here in North Carolina, law enforcement also is taking a stand.  Jose L. Lopez, Sr. Chief of Police, City of Durham says, “Law enforcement leaders, like me, recognize that early childhood education programs are among the most powerful weapon to prevent crime and violence. One common thread among many successful students is that early in their lives, they were taught, encouraged and often challenged by a variety of new exposures and learning experiences. By in large many of today’s offenders were not provided these experiences nor were they nurtured and supported to succeed in school and life.”

Download a new Fight Crime: Invest in Kids report.

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Young Child Risk Calculator

Tuesday, April 12th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

The National Center for Children in Poverty (NCCP) released a new online tool, The Young Child Risk Calculator, which shows users how many children under age six in each state are experiencing serious risks to their development. The tool allows users to select from various age groups as well as economic and other risk factors known to affect children’s development. The risk factors used in the tool are known to increase the chance of poor health, school, and developmental outcomes for young children. NCCP also released their latest Early Childhood State Policy Profiles, a comprehensive view of state policies in the areas of health, early care and education, and parenting and economic supports, that affect the health and well-being of young children in low-income families.

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Early Learning Matters! Watch the Video

Wednesday, March 30th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

The First Five Years Fund has developed an amazing video that addresses the importance of early childhood education. It’s worth watching!

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Duke Research Shows Smart Start Increases Third Grade Test Scores, Reduces Need for Special Education

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

North Carolina third-graders have higher standardized reading and math scores and lower special education placement rates in those counties that had received more funding for Smart Start and More at Four when those children were younger, Duke University researchers have found.

“These findings provide the most rigorous evidence yet that investments in these early childhood initiatives generate substantial benefits for all the children in the counties that receive these funds, even children who were never enrolled in the early childhood programs,” said Helen Ladd, the Edgar T. Thompson Distinguished Professor of Public Policy and a professor of economics at Duke.

For an average third-grade child whose community had received Smart Start or More at Four funding, the expected savings in special education and instructional costs is at least equal to the cost of those programs, researchers said. “By the time the children grow up, we expect the investment will have yielded large payoffs in lower special education and remedial costs,” concluded Kenneth Dodge, the William McDougall Professor of Public Policy and director of Duke’s Center for Child and Family Policy.

Smart Start provides state funds for high-quality child care and services for health, cognitive and social development from birth to age five. It was initiated in 1993 in pilot counties and then expanded statewide by 1999. More at Four provides funds for high-quality preschool for at-risk four-year-olds. It was first implemented in 2001 in pilot counties and then expanded statewide by 2004. More at Four spending has averaged about $1,250 for every four-year-old child in a county, and Smart Start spending has averaged about $250 per child per year for children ages 0 to 5 ($1,250 total).

Duke professors Kenneth Dodge, Clara Muschkin and Ladd used new methods and data to evaluate North Carolina’s investment in these two initiatives. Past evaluations of the impact have compared school performance for children who had participated in Smart Start or More at Four to other children within the same counties who had not.

In the new study, the Duke researchers asked a different and broader question: Do dollar investments for these initiatives lead to improvements in education outcomes for all a county’s children? The study is ongoing, and the researchers plan to extend the analyses to include other educational outcomes beyond the third grade.

Ladd said that a statistical problem, called selection bias, often plagues studies that attempt to measure the impact of a voluntary program on its participants. “Our study avoids that problem to the extent that dollar allocations are received by entire communities rather than individual children,” Ladd noted. Because Smart Start and More at Four were introduced in different counties in different years at different per-child state investment levels, the researchers were able to use the variation to test the overall impact on child outcomes.

“A second advantage of the new study is the possibility of capturing ‘spillover effects,’ whereby children who are not enrolled in these initiatives but live in the same communities also experience academic benefits.” Ladd noted that spillover effects might arise, for example, from the availability of higher quality child care or pre-school programs, which can benefit all children in a county. Muschkin, assistant Research Professor of Public Policy at Duke added, “Another source of potential benefit for all students is the boost that these initiatives may have on children’s school readiness, allowing classroom teachers to devote less time to remediation and to handling disruptive behaviors, and more time to enrichment and educational activities for all children.”

In their analyses to date, the researchers found that third-grade math and reading scores are higher in counties that had received higher allocations for Smart Start and More at Four. Although only a minority of children in any county participated directly in these initiatives, the impact was equivalent to several months of extra schooling for all children in that county.

“The positive effect is highest among the group of children for whom the initiatives were targeted — children at risk for academic failure. The impact of each allocation contributes independently of the other allocation, and the effects are cumulative.”

Dodge said their research findings show these two initiatives have improved academic achievement and reduced placements for special education.”It has been a wise investment,” he said.

The Duke study was supported by the Smith Richardson Foundation, the Spencer Foundation, the Center for the Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research (a federally funded research center of which Duke is one of five university partners), Duke’s Sanford School of Public Policy and the Duke Center for Child and Family Policy. The authors have no affiliation with any state-funded early childhood program.

Download statement by Dr. Olson Huff, Chair of the Board of The North Carolina Partnership for Children, Inc.
Download the Duke Smart Start Study Press Release.
Download the Duke Power Point.

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Children’s Advocacy Day

Thursday, March 10th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

Action for Children NC, the Covenant with North Carolina’s Children, the North Carolina Partnership for Children, Inc., NC MomsRising, the NC Pediatric Society, the Child Care Coalition and others will join forces for a day of educating the General Assembly on the importance of children’s programs and services, including health insurance for children, child care subsidies and early education, infant mortality prevention funding, and community-based services for at-risk youth. Children did not create the current budget crisis and they should not have to shoulder the burden of solving it.

When: Tuesday, March 15. 9 am; press conference at 11:30.

Where: NC General Assembly, 16 West Jones Street, Raleigh, NC 27601. Children’s Advocacy Day table will be set up in the 1100 court in the Legislative Building. Press conference will be held in front of the Legislative Building (on Jones St.).

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Dr. Olson Huff Appointed Chair of NCPC Board

Thursday, February 10th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

One of America’s most respected pediatricians, Dr. Olson Huff, M.D., has been named chairman of the board of The North Carolina Partnership for Children, Inc. (NCPC), the organization that leads Smart Start across the state.  Huff fills the position left vacant by Ashley Thrift last year.  In this role, Huff will lead the 26-member board that provides oversight to ensure that all North Carolina children have access to the high-quality early care and education they need to thrive. 

A Kentucky native, Huff practiced pediatrics in North Carolina for more than 33 years. He spent much of that time in the Asheville area where he created and worked for a developmental pediatrics program at the Thoms Rehabilitation Hospital.  In 1995, the program was named the Olson Huff Center for Child Development in his honor. In 1994 he was appointed by Mission Hospital as the Medical Director for the Ruth and Billy Graham Children’s Health Center, which, during his tenure, became Mission Children’s Hospital. Huff retired from that position in 2001 to become a consultant to the Mission Hospital Health Care Foundation.

Dr. Huff has served as president of the NC Pediatric Society and is currently chair the Committee on Federal Government Affairs of the American Academy of Pediatrics. He has been a tireless advocate on behalf of children and has devoted untold voluntary hours in this role. He was a Senior Fellow for Action for Children and a Commissioner for the North Carolina Health and Wellness Trust Fund. He also has served on a number of boards and commissions, including the NC Foundation for Advanced Health Programs, N.C. Institute of Medicine, Mountain Area Health Education Center, the North Carolina Pediatric Society, and many others.

Huff has a long history of service with NCPC. He was on the original NCPC Board of Directors that created Smart Start in North Carolina in the early 1990s. He served on the board for 14 years and was the chair of the Planning and Oversight Committee for many of those years. Now he returns as chair of this organization, which has been instrumental improving the quality of child care in the state and serving the health needs of the state’s youngest children.  

“We are thrilled that Olson Huff has been named chairman of the NCPC Board,” said Tannis Nelson, Vice Chair and Acting Board Chair of NCPC. “His life’s passion has been ensuring that all children in the state are healthy and have the support they need to reach their fullest potential. We are thrilled to have such a respected champion for children guiding our work at this critical juncture, when health and humans services programs for families and children hang in the balance.”

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Report Shows Declining Fortunes of Children in Middle-Class Families

Monday, January 31st, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

America’s middle-class children have been steadily falling further behind their more privileged peers for the past quarter century – but the worst of the fallout has been held in check by essential policies and programs that could be unraveled, depending on key budget decisions, according to a new study released by the Foundation for Child Development.

Declining Fortunes of Children in Middle-Class Families tracks over a 24-year period the relationship between family income levels and positive and negative outcomes for children across key indicators of their health, education, and social relationships. The report is based on national statistics used in FCD’s annual Child Well-Being Index (CWI), a comprehensive measure of how well America’s children are faring.

Key findings  include:

  • Children in middle-class families were losing economic ground long before the Great Recession.
  • The income gap between families is widening.
  • Public education and health programs have stepped in to provide essential services for middle-class children that their parents cannot afford or take for granted.
  • The precarious situation of the middle-class is also reflected in the rising numbers of children in middle-class families living with one parent or in families without a securely employed parent.

Read the report.

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