Community Meeting Notes: Early care and learning
As part of its strategic planning process WPF held twelve facilitated meetings, involving nearly 150 civic leaders, practitioners, public officials, and subject-matter experts in areas related to our grantmaking.
The following are notes taken at a meeting held on September 30, 2011 to discuss WPF's future grantmaking in early care and learning.
Individuals participated with the understanding that they were speaking without attribution, so their names are intentionally omitted from these notes.
Meeting Purpose and Questions
WPF has made substantial investments in early care and
learning at the regional and state levels. Grant making focused on increasing
public sector support for early childhood programs and on improving the
effective use of these resources via standards and accountability through data
collection and assessment of outcomes.
The past eight years represent unprecedented advancement for the
Pennsylvania system of early childhood supports. The impact of transitions in state government
and the current economic and political constraints need to be considered.
We invited local and national representatives of the provider
sector (both for- and nonprofit), academia, funders, and the public sector, to
discuss potential approaches to improve the quality of care for young children
in a variety of domains, with the following questions:
What are the gaps related to fundamental needs of young
children that are not being addressed—such as infant and toddler care,
children’s physical and behavioral health—and what are the opportunities for
the Foundation to play a role? What should the focus of our efforts be, given
the constraints on the public sector, to maintain progress and advance the
work? Apart from funding actual child
care slots for children, what efforts can we undertake locally to improve
quality of care? How can we build on our
work in the shared services arena? Are
there new business models in early care and education we should explore? What
approach can we take to transition issues from early care to K-12, given the
challenges facing the School District of Philadelphia? Is there a way to take
advantage of healthcare reform to benefit young children?
The field is likely to evolve into a tiered set of providers
- those able to create and manage local centers within a consolidated operating
system and those operating single or small clusters of programs. Economic factors are driving this trend. Expanded health care and social services and
the need for data-based decision-making call for providers to be able to scale
up.
Sustain and advance the investment and commitment to data
collection, assessment, and decision-making at the center level.
As the field matures, a new generation of leaders, managers,
and practitioners need to step in. This leadership group needs to represent the
diversity of the workforce, community, and region.
Be alert to challenges that may weaken the current array of
federal, state and local resources.
Address the public policy issues to enable providers to
collaborate with the public sector agencies serving their children and
families.
Support the dialogue on the consolidation issue, and require
quality care in the consolidation process.
What factors should be considered when exploring how to build the next
phase of Early Care in the region? What
does a tiered system look like?
Providers see a role for the Foundation in mapping user needs
– as both market analysis and service delivery issues
Consolidation can be a challenging venture for the enterprise
owner. This is “new space” for nonprofit
leaders. Can WPF bridge the gap
(research, access to experts, field trips, etc.) for the executives and boards
of providers looking to grow an effective business model? Consolidation includes expanded
infrastructure as well as facilities.
While there is wide support for an assessment process, there
are strong views about how to assess.
There may be a role for WPF’s research and policy capacities.
The Foundation should continue to support its investment in
the use of data and in the shared services systems that it has nurtured.
As this field matures, there is increasing interest in
research on disrupted attachment relationships and exposure to violence at home
and in the community. The research could
be translated into professional development options for staff.
Build a demonstration model of a comprehensive, high quality
early learning program that helps lower the barrier to cost and growth and
encourages shared service alliances.
Invest in the policy front in two ways: Protect the current policy and resource
allocations and advance state and local policies and practices that will
support the delivery of good services and remove the cross-agency barriers
facing the providers.
Address the issue of recruiting talented individuals to work
at all levels and types of early childhood development programs, and foster
emerging leaders.
Support the re-framing of how to discuss the ECE workforce to
address inadequate compensation and career ladder.
Support new models of professional development (degrees or
certification). Address the opportunity
to influence the diversity of staff with board and executives. Pilot a fellowship program.