Saturday, August 4, 2012

SHARING WEB RESOURCES


An outside link on the “Center for the Childcare Workforce” I chose to review was “Child Care Law Center” (www.childcarelaw.org). The child care law center advocates for children, families and communities to provide high quality child care services to everyone. The Child Care Law Center uses legal expertise to secure good, affordable child care for low-income families and communities.  Every day, we break down barriers to child care for working parents because without it they cannot support their families.  Every day, we stand up for child care providers because children need good early care and education to thrive (www.childcarelaw.org). The CCLC is based in San Francisco is a non-profit organization. It is the only organization in the country devoted to ensuring intricate law issues related to child care are resolved.
The area I chose to search on the website was “public policy”. This area had information about how states address compensation issues for early childhood educators. The areas discussed include; apprenticeships, health initiatives, mentoring programs, public/private partnerships, scholarship programs, unionization wage incentives and tiered reimbursement rates. Adequate compensation is vital to ensure the turnover rate is less. Teachers receiving better compensation are more likely to provide more positive developmental experiences for children. The “Center for the Childcare Workforce” realize that teachers who are better compensated, well-educated, and have a voice in their workplace improves the quality of care for children (www.ccw.org).

The e-newsletter had information about a new program through federal policy and legislation called “And We’re Off to the Races”. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced the new $500 million Race to the Top Early Learning Challenge program. The RTT-ELC grant competition will focus on improving early learning and development programs for young children by supporting states' efforts to:
1. increase the number and percentage of low-income and disadvantaged children in each age group of infants, toddlers and preschoolers who are enrolled in high-quality early learning programs;
2. design and implement an integrated system of high-quality early learning programs and services; and
3. ensure that any use of assessments conforms with the recommendations of the National Research Council's reports on early childhood (www.ccw.org).  
The program is still in the early stages. More information and data will be available as the program progresses.

The website had the following article from American Educator that talked about the value of early childhood education.  “The Economics of Equality”, investing early allows us to shape the future; investing later chains us to fixing the missed opportunities of the past. Controlling our destiny is more in keeping with the American spirit." (www.ccw.org)

The Center for the Childcare Workforce is an excellent website for resources relating to the early childhood field and additional links for valuable information. The website offers “Tips” for the classroom and other valuable information for early childhood professionals. I learn something new each time I go to the website.

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2 comments:

  1. This sounds great. I have never heard of this before. ... I am so agreed that teachers in ece need to be better compensated. It stirs all kinds of emotions in me when I think about how much work me and my fellow teachers do for 1/4 of the money kindergarten teachers receive. I believe it one of the reason the turnover rates are so high in programs because teachers leave for better paying and better benefited jobs. It only hurts the kids.

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  2. Our state applied for both the initial Race to the Top and the secondary Race to the Top Early Learning Grant. I had the privelidge of reading the application (not in it's entirety)throughtout the process. Our state did not receive the grant due to an unestablished quality rating system and an already developed kindergarten entry assessment. Our State has committed to funding both of these efforts, outside of the grant

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