Tag Archives: education

NC House To Hold Public Hearing on Senate Budget

Monday, May 24, 2010 from 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m.

Now is the time to let state policymakers know that they need to Hold the Line and protect and preserve North Carolina’s nationally recognized early childhood education system.

We need a strong showing of support. Hard economic times make it even more essential to invest in young children. Today’s children are our future leaders, parents and workers. Our state’s prosperity depends on on the investments we make now. The message supports what 800 parents, business leaders, elected officials, health care providers, early childhood professionals and others from across the state had to say when they came together this year to speak to the importance of investing in our youngest citizens. All agreed that ensuring access to high quality early childhood care and education programs needed to be a top priority for the state. It is vital during a public debate that you stand up and speak on the need to preserve North Carolina’s early childhood system and future prosperity.

There are two actions that you need to take.

1) Attend either the event in Raleigh or one of the video sites.
Both the live and video events will be held on Monday, May 24, 2010 from 7:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. Make sure that you have found at least one person to speak on early childhood issues at each location. Don’t forget to wear your Smart Start t-shirts and download a sign to bring. These signs made a huge impact last year–make them visible!

Live Location: McKimmon Center on the campus of North Carolina State University

Video Locations: Bladen Community College (Dublin), Central Piedmont Community College (Charlotte), and Southwestern Community College (Sylva)

Visit www.nccommunitycolleges.edu/colleges_map.aspx for contact information and driving directions to each campus.

Guidelines for speakers are available online.

2) Submit written comments.
Email: Town.Hall@ncleg.net (Until midnight, May 25, 2010.)
Mail: House Appropriations Committee, Suite 401, LOB, 300 N. Salisbury Street, Raleigh, NC 27603-5925 (Postmarked by May 25, 2010)

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Lt. Gov. Walter Dalton Welcomes Delegates to Smart Start Summit in Greenville

 Summit Will Determine Highest Priorities for Youngest North Carolinians

Lt. Governor Walter Dalton will welcome more than 200 community members from eastern North Carolina at the “Smart Investing” summit in Greenville on Tuesday, March 2nd. The summit focuses on the importance of investing in early educational development and health programs for young children (ages 0-5). The attendants will be voting on the top priorities for state policymakers to consider regarding these critical investments.

Part of a public engagement initiative funded by the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation and with support from Smart Start, “Smart Investing: Communities Thrive When Children Thrive,” brings together a diverse mix of citizens in communities throughout the state to determine how best to invest in North Carolina’s youngest citizens. Lt. Governor is serving as the initiative’s statewide spokesperson. His remarks will underscore the summit theme: an investment of public and private dollars in enhancing childhood development is ultimately an investment in economic growth.

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Igniting a SPARK for Early Learning

By Henrietta Zalkind and Anthony Berkley

by Martino!

Young children learn more, do better in school and, ultimately, in the workplace when they move seamlessly from home to child care to preschool to the early grades. Unfortunately, far too few children experience such seamlessness, thanks to a herky-jerky educational system that moves them from one place and grade to the next with no sense of continuity.

A number of communities large and small are hard at work to change that- in places ranging from Philadelphia, Miami and Atlanta to Edgecombe and Nash Counties in eastern North Carolina. These communities have launched and expanded promising early learning initiatives through a project called SPARK, Supporting Partnerships to Assure Ready Kids.

Sponsored by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, SPARK works to smooth those crucial transitions from home, child care and preschool to elementary school.

The goal: to make sure that children are ready for school and that schools are ready for them.

In North Carolina, the Down East Partnership for Children (DEPC) has worked for over 16 years to build a strong foundation for children and families by advocating and supporting high quality early care and education and a coordinated system of community resources. As one of the SPARK initiative sites, DEPC created a model of services designed to ensure that all children in Edgecombe and Nash counties in eastern North Carolina are healthy and ready for Kindergarten and are launched as successful learners by the end of third grade.

To help share the lessons learned through SPARK’s early learning initiatives, the W.K. Kellogg Foundation partnered with IDEO, a renowned design and innovation consulting firm, to help communities improve their learning systems. Instead of relying on outside experts – the usual method for reforming schools – these communities are looking inward, tapping parents, teachers, business and faith leaders, and even students to help generate solutions that work for them.

The best programs, we continue to learn, link parents, teachers, and students and create strong connections between classrooms and communities, building an educational continuum.

Communities, school districts, and policymakers are creating new ways to teach and nurture children from age 3 through third grade. National leaders are taking notice and, more important, taking steps to replicate successful programs across the map.

We have the chance, thanks to these dynamics, to revolutionize learning and set our children on a path to long-term success.

Communities such as Edgecombe and Nash counties are already creating new pathways that support early learning and success in school. Such groundbreaking strategies can help shape federal and state policies. In turn, federal and state governments must allow communities the flexibility to implement policies that help their children learn best.

This kind of thinking – the creation and championing of innovative programs that communities throughout America can adapt – may well turn this time of economic crisis into one of meaningful and lasting education reform.

The painful economic meltdown has forced school districts across the nation to cut spending – even, in some cases, for core teachers and staff. But we do have, amid these depressing cutbacks, a bit of surprising good news on the education front.

The federal government is promoting real, meaningful reform, the kind that hasn’t occurred in decades. And it’s putting up some real, meaningful money to help pay for it.

The President is asking states and communities with innovative ideas to help reshape American education. To propel these innovative ideas, two new federal funds for innovation will provide a total of $5 billion, enough to launch what Education Secretary Arne Duncan has described as “education reform’s moon shot.” These funds aim to do nothing less than inspire communities to shake up the education landscape.

The best ideas for education, we’ve long known, bubble up from the community level. Now the stars seem aligned to give this type of bottom-up innovation serious consideration.

Zalkind is the executive director of the Down East Partnership for Children in Rocky Mount, North Carolina. Berkley is the deputy director for education and learning at the W.K. Kellogg Foundation.

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Study Shows Impact of Early Education on School Success

DSC_0052A new report from the National Center for Education Statistics offers more proof that early care and education experiences are a critical part of future school success. Findings showed: 

  • Children who participated in regular early care and education arrangements the year prior to kindergarten scored higher on the reading and mathematics assessments than children who had no regular experience in early care and education the year prior to entering kindergarten.
  • Children who participated in regular early care and education arrangements the year prior to kindergarten scored higher on the fine motor skill assessments than children who had no regular early care and education the year prior to entering kindergarten.
  • About four out of five (83.2 percent) participated in a regular non-parental early care and education arrangement the year before kindergarten.

 The U.S. Department of Education’s Early Childhood Longitudinal Study is helping researchers paint a picture of children from birth through their kindergarten year. Participants are representatives of the approximately 4 million children born in 2001 in the United States. Researchers began regularly collecting information when the children were just 9 months old. It is being used to better understand children’s:

  • early development;
  • home learning experiences;
  • experiences in early care and education programs;
  • health care, nutrition, and physical well-being; and
  • how early experiences relate to their later development, learning, and success in school.

Download the full report.

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UPDATE: Step Up for Children at Rain Location

STEP UP 2009 WILL BE HELD AT THE RAIN LOCATION: NC Association of Educators auditorium, 700 S. Salisbury Street, downtown Raleigh.

Action for Children North Carolina and more than 30 co-sponsors including the North Carolina Pediatric Society, the North Carolina Partnership, Inc. (Smart Start), the North Carolina Association of Educators and Prevent Child Abuse North Carolina announce the following event.
 
What: Step Up and Act for Children 2009 — children’s performances and speakers calling for more federal investment in child health and early education
 
When: Monday, October 5, 11:15 a.m.-12:20 p.m.

Children’s performance groups (11:30-11:50) will include:
 Hunter Elementary School show choir (5th graders)
Hunter Elementary School advanced orchestra (5th graders)

Press event speakers  (11:50-12:20) will include:

  • Marian F. Earls, M.D., President, North Carolina Pediatric Society
  • Stephanie Fanjul, President of the N.C. Partnership for Children, Inc (Smart Start)
  • Worth Hill, Durham County Sheriff
  • Felicia Willems, mother and advocate for children

Rain location: N.C. Association of Educators, 700 S. Salisbury Street

Why: Calling on federal officials to make children’s health and early education more of a priority.

Child advocates across the country are planning nonpartisan events on Capitol steps the first week in October to call on federal elected officials to make children’s issues a higher priority. Action for Children and partners will be calling on our leaders to commit to increased investments in children’s health and early education.
 
Media is invited to cover the event. It is suggested that you arrive by 11:15.

Full list of co-sponsors:
North Carolina Pediatric Society, Covenant with North Carolina’s Children, The North Carolina Partnership, Inc. (Smart Start), N.C. Health Access Coalition, N.C. Education and Law Project, North Carolina Association of Educators, Prevent Child Abuse North Carolina, United Way of North Carolina, The Mental Health Association in North Carolina, The Arc of North Carolina, Children and Family Services Association-N.C., IDA and Asset Building Collaborative of N.C., North Carolina Bankers Association, National Association of Social Workers – N.C. Chapter, Self-Help and the Center for Responsible Lending, El Pueblo, Goldsboro Pediatrics, The Arc of Wake County, Wake County Smart Start, Haven House, Council for Children’s Rights, Youth Homes, Inc., Legal Services of the Southern Piedmont, Alexander Youth Network, Forsyth Futures, Smart Start of Forsyth County, Youth Opportunities, Inc., Children’s Law Center of Central N.C., Children First/Communities In Schools of Buncombe County, Rainbo Renaissance Creative Solutions, Durham’s Partnership for Children, Guilford Education Alliance, Down East Partnership for Children, Appalachian Family Innovations.

 

   

Background on national Step Up:
With 14 million children living in poverty, 7 million without health insurance and 3 million reported abused or neglected in the U.S., the Every Child Matters Education Fund (ECMEF) has sponsored the annual “Step Up for Kids” week, giving organizations and individuals a chance to celebrate their children while at the same time calling for solutions to the issues confronting them. According to the ECMEF-published Homeland Insecurity (3rd edition, 2009), the U.S. has the worst child poverty rate among 24 rich countries. Our infant mortality rate is more than double that of Japan’s. While 100 percent of France’s three- to five- year-olds are in early learning programs, only 65 percent of U.S. benefit from such learning-readiness programs.

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House to Take Up Early Learning Challenge Fund Today

From our friends at the National Association for the Education of Young of Children (NAEYC):

The U.S. House of Representatives is scheduled to take up tomorrow the Early Learning Challenge Fund, which is Title IV of H.R. 3221.  (The bill primarily deals with student financial aid.) This is an important opportunity for new resources ($8 billion over 8 years) for grants to states to improve their systems of quality early learning and development across all types of programs.  The Early Learning Challenge Fund is paid by savings made in the student financial aid section of the bill and does not add to the deficit.
 
You can email your Representative at www.naeyc.org/policy/action
For a summary of the Early Learning Challenge Fund, go to www.naeyc.org/policy/federal/07_17_09
 
To read NAEYC’s press release on the Early Learning Challenge Fund, please go to

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What does $9.7 million mean to Smart Start?

The FY 09-10 budget cuts Smart Start’s funding by 7.62% ($15,965,000). Now, with Governor Perdue ordering an additional 5% withholding, Smart Start faces an additional loss of f $9,682,892.

To gain perspective on what that means, Smart Start has put together a list of what $9.7 million means to Smart Start.

$7.8 million = ALL programs to improve the quality of early child care programs.
Studies show that children in high-quality child care programs have better brain and social development.

OR

$13.2 million = ALL programs that keep stable, qualified teachers in early childhood classrooms.
Research shows teacher education is related to high quality preschool programs that lead to increases in school success, higher test scores, fewer school dropouts, higher graduation rates, less special education and even lower crime rates.

OR

$8.2 million = ALL Parents as Teachers programs.
Parents as Teachers increases parent knowledge of early childhood development, improves parenting practices, provides early detection of developmental delays and health issues, prevents child abuse and neglect, and increases children’s school readiness and school success.

OR

$9.2 million = ALL Prenatal and Newborn AND All Home Visiting AND All Child Care Health Consultants programs.
Research has found that home visitor programs can increase use of prenatal care, result in fewer subsequent pregnancies, improve developmental outcomes for infants, and decrease child abuse and neglect.

OR

$11 million = ALL programs to help parents find quality child care and the resources to afford it.
High-quality early education and child care for young children improves their health and promotes their development and learning.

OR

$10.1 million = ALL of Smart Start’s early childhood programs in 33 counties — leaving the more than 41,000 children (0 to 5) in those counties without these services.
The 33 counties are Alleghany, Ashe, Avery, Bertie, Camden, Caswell, Cherokee, Chowan, Clay, Currituck, Dare, Davie, Gates, Graham, Greene, Hyde, Jackson, Jones, Macon, Madison, Martin, Mitchell, Northampton, Pamlico, Perquimans, Polk, Swain, Transylvania, Tyrrell, Warren, Washington, Watauga, and Yancey.

In her announcement of the withholding, the Governor said:

 “Special exceptions may be made for constitutionally mandated or entitlement programs as well as urgent situations related to direct classroom instruction, economic development opportunities, law enforcement, health care and public safety.”

Surely, the same rationale that applies to protecting K-12 education, applies to protecting early childhood education.
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Dear Governor . . . (Part 4)

Over the next several days, we will be posting letters written by early childhood education supporters in response to our August 26th post. We hope that Governor Perdue is listening.

Thank you Governor Bev Perdue for allowing me to relay this message. 055030a

The children receiving the services provided by Smart Start are growing into more productive adults that is helping our economy to flourish. Cutting services would return these children to a cycle of poverty, welfare, hardship in education increasing our drop-out rate, unplanned pregnancy, crime, and drugs. As this population grows and this cycle continues, it will increasingly strain our budget at a crippling rate.

If you must make cuts, I ask that you review programs that don’t include preparing our youth for a better education, promoting self-esteem and self-worth, and encouraging them to reach goals that have not been obtained by the generations before them.

We believe that the Governor can and should make Smart Start exempt from additional the 5% nonrecurring reduction proposed by the Office of State Budget and Management (OSBM). Clearly Smart Start is related to success in school, is part of economic development, and is essential for the economic recovery for NC.

Please, allow Smart Start to help our economy to flourish.

Thank you for your time-
Jason Sparks
Asheville, NC

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Dear Governor . . . (Part 3)

Over the next several days, we will be posting letters written by early childhood education supporters in response to our August 26th post. We hope that Governor Perdue is listening.

Governor Perdue,

In running for election, you based your campaign on education and advocacy for young children through Smart Start. This was a very welcome agenda in that we all know that education and the well being of young children are vital to the future success of our State.

Your job has been difficult especially in these trying economic times but I would ask before you make another cut in the Smart Start budget to look at other and all possibilities. Not knowing all the programs and operations of the States government, it is a simple request for me to make of you and other leaders. But I also feel that cuts to Smart Start are probably the easiest to make because children have no real voice, at least not yet. Smart Start will do all the right things to ensure that these children receive everything necessary to make them responsible and productive citizens. Smart Start has been in existence long enough to begin paying real dividends, let’s keep the momentum and continue investing in our future.

You have the opportunity to advance our State in the right direction and secure its future by preserving Smart Start, please do the right thing.

Thank you.

Joe W. Carroll

Winston-Salem, NC

 

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Protecting Education Begins at Birth

The young children of North Carolina are desperately waiting for the Governor to notice them. Her neglect will not just be devastating for the more than 742,232 children five and under and their families. It puts every North Carolinian at risk.

The same rationale that applies to protecting K-12 education, applies to protecting early childhood education. There is so much science on this, it’s hard to figure out where to begin to show how critical these early years are. Today’s children are our future leaders, parents and workers. Our state’s prosperity depends on their healthy development and growth. The key to ensuring that healthy development and growth is early childhood experiences.

Yet these experiences are being threatened. All around the state, children and families rely on Smart Start to ensure that their early childhood programs are of high quality and safe, that they have programs available to them to support parenting (particularly important in times of stress), that they have access to needed health care, and more. Unfortunately, all of these children and families will see these services cut back again.

Yes, we know cuts are necessary. But so are priorities. We at Smart Start accepted our $15,965,000 (7.62%) recurring cut this year because we know we must all do our part. But the Governor has potentially added another 5% cut on top of that. IF this additional 5% nonrecurring reduction is applied to Smart Start it will result in a total annual reduction of $25,647,892 (12.2%).

In her announcement of the cut, the Governor said:

 “Special exceptions may be made for constitutionally mandated or entitlement programs as well as urgent situations related to direct classroom instruction, economic development opportunities, law enforcement, health care and public safety.”

Clearly early childhood education is related to success in school, is part of economic development, and is essential for the economic recovery for North Carolina. She has made special exceptions for other programs that she deems important and she should make an exception for Smart Start as well.

Please call, email, and fax the Governor immediately and let her know that Smart Start should be exempt from this additional cut. This is the Governor who claimed to be the “mother of Smart Start”. We need to help her remember that Smart Start is essential to NC’s recovery.

The Governor’s number is 919-733-4240, her office email is governor.office@nc.gov, and her fax is 919-733-2120.

Thanks for making these calls and speaking up on behalf of children.

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