1 / 31

Early Head Start- Child Care Partnerships Supporting Successful Applications across Illinois

Early Head Start- Child Care Partnerships Supporting Successful Applications across Illinois. Governor’s Office of Early Childhood Development.

devlin
Télécharger la présentation

Early Head Start- Child Care Partnerships Supporting Successful Applications across Illinois

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. Early Head Start- Child Care Partnerships Supporting Successful Applications across Illinois

  2. Governor’s Office of Early Childhood Development The Governor's Office of Early Childhood Development (OECD) was established to facilitate cross system collaboration to advance a more unified early childhood system which ensures high quality care and education for children birth to age 5. • Governor’s Birth to Five Initiative • Race to the Top-Early Learning Challenge • Maternal and Infant Early Childhood Home Visiting Program • Illinois Early Learning Council

  3. Vision of the Illinois Early Learning Council As we move forward in building our system, our emphasis will be on providing more intensive and effective services to the most vulnerable children and families • Ensuring access to high quality services—removing barriers to participation • Birth to Five focus Successful EHS-CC Partnerships are critical to fulfilling this vision!

  4. Illinois’ Opportunity • Base funding for Illinois is estimated to be $15,933,899 • An additional 2.5% will be available for Training/Technical Assistance • This is a substantial increase in Early Head Start!

  5. Understanding the federal priorities • Only center-based model is allowed • Priority points are given for applications that are 100% child care partnerships • Expansion applications are allowed, but FOA states that Department will prioritize funding for applications that are at least 50% partnerships • If you are doing an expansion without partnerships, you need to explain why partnerships are not a good option

  6. Priority Zip Codes • If one or more of these zip codes are part of your service area, you will automatically receive 5 points for community need • This doesn’t mean only applications that serve these zip codes will be funded! • Many areas with very high need were not included in the list • You must make the case for the need

  7. Community Need & Objectives

  8. Describing need • Pay careful attention to the questions asked in the FOA • Describing your precise geography is very important • Include a map if you can • Show that you understand where the greatest need is within that geography • This can get tricky to describe if you are applying for multiple areas—use lots of tables!

  9. Resources for describing the need • You need to describe: • Estimated number of EHS-eligible children in your geographic area • Estimated number who are receiving CCAP • IECAM is your best friend! • In Chicago, Young Children in Chicago is also a great resource (http://dfss-ycic.chapinhall.org) • OECD has also assembled some at-a-glance resources for you on our webiste

  10. Documenting current capacity in community • OECD page has info available on numbers of slots of infant-toddler care in QRS-rated and accredited programs in key zip codes • If you need information about other areas, please ask us! • List of QRS Star Rated programs is currently available • Searchable website of ExceleRate sites will be available early July

  11. Matching program to need • Need to justify your program based on community need, not just on what you think would be easiest to implement • Important to look at: • What are parents’ work schedules in your community? • How close do parents live to centers?

  12. Minimum CCAP Participation • Partnership applicants must describe plan to ensure that a minimum of 25% of children enrolled are receiving child care subsidy at any given time (bonus points for ensuring 40% are) • This reflects reality in many states of severe under-funding of child care assistance AND • Reality that some participants will start off eligible for CCAP and then lose eligibility, but still need to be continuously served • In our state, we encourage you to plan for the vast majority of EHS-CCP participants to be receiving CCAP • We already have more supportive policies in place than many states • We are working to make them even better for you!

  13. Your Enrollment Plan • You must estimate the date you will begin serving children (they are looking for this to be as soon as possible) • Must meet ratios and facility requirements from beginning of service • Teacher/FCC provider qualification requirements must be met by 18 months after grant award • Recruitment & enrollment must focus on reaching children most in need • You will be expected to maintain a waiting list, and to prioritize highest-need children • Your child care partners will be expected to abide by this recruitment and enrollment plan • You must serve a minimum of 10% children with disabilities • Expectation is that all (or nearly all) participants will be under 100% FPL

  14. Project Design & Approach

  15. Describing Your Approach • This section is much less detailed than in typical EHS or HS applications • Be brief and to the point, but make sure to show how you plan to meet the required Performance Standards • Have a Head Start veteran read this over for you to make sure you have included everything you need! • Our TA consultants can help you if you need assistance planning parts of the program

  16. Things to Note in this Section • You will want to describe a birth-to-school-entry continuum in your application • Show how you will work with home visiting programs, preschool programs, and any other services that children will transition from or to • Demonstrate that children who receive EHS won’t be unserved once they turn three

  17. Organizational Infrastructure & Management Systems

  18. Selling Your Organization • Demonstrate that you have the capacity to implement this grant • Description of fiscal controls is quite important—make sure you understand what is required in the HS Performance Standards • This is a good section to have a veteran HS person review, too!

  19. Staffing

  20. Planning for PD • Important to take stock of current qualifications of staff in partner sites • Remember, in EHS, there are two Teachers in every room—both must meet requirements • Infant-Toddler Credential • We can help connect you to community colleges and universities if you ask soon!

  21. Bonus Points

  22. Project Budget & Budget Justification

  23. Things to consider • Lay out your budget to show what expenses (at grantee and partner level) will be paid for by which sources • Early Head Start • Non-federal match • Other sources, which may include federal CCDF • Separate budget for the 2.5% of T/TA funds • We will post example budget layouts in a couple of weeks

  24. Start-Up Funds • This is an additional budget, on top of your request for annual funding • Costs like new equipment for classrooms, curriculum materials, and other one-time purchases can be requested here • Also consider a start-up planning consultant or intensive TA support • Orientation and start-up training for staff belong here • You may need non-federal share for this, too

  25. Overall Guidance on Preparing Your Application

  26. Timeline • Due date is absolute • Do NOT plan to submit on the due date—way too risky! • Get online now to make sure you are able to start your application, have everything you need, and are able to upload documents • Know that developing MOUs with partners will take many weeks—you should have already started or plan to start very soon • The application forms (SF-424) are tricky—do NOT wait until the last week to tackle these

  27. Page Limits & Formatting • These page limits are very tight • You will need to carefully plan your application to get everything you need included • E.g., consider having all partners sign a single MOU instead of including multiple copies in appendices • Know how you will create pdfs from your application—don’t wait until last minute

  28. Next Steps • OECD will be planning regional meetings to provide support to potential applicants and partners • We need to know what you need help with! • Contact Karen Yarborough with your TA needs

  29. What support do you need to be successful?

  30. Web Resources: • OECD EHS-CC Partnership Page: http://www2.illinois.gov/gov/OECD/Pages/EHS-CCP.aspx • Administration for Children and Families: http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ecd/early-head-start-child-care-partnerships • EHS-CC 101 • Webinars • Toolkits • A LOT of Resources! • BUILD: http://www.buildinitiative.org/OurWork/StateandLocal/StateLocalSystems/EarlyHeadStart-ChildCarePartnerships.aspx • Webinars

  31. Thank You

More Related