NAEYC Accreditation Nationwide

NAEYC Accreditation Nationwide

NAEYC Criteria as a Strategy for Improving Child Care

As you know, child care providers asked to review the Draft Standard Application on March 15, 2017, were presented self-assessment mirroring NAEYC criteria (which is closely aligned with ECERS) including a “required personnel registry”.

While it is the duty of DHS to carry out the implementation of the CCDF State Plan, the policy-makers and individuals responsible for sweeping change for disadvantaged child care small businesses are the members of the Governor’s SECAC. (Click here to review limited contact info and identification of State Early Childhood Advisory Council membersSECAC Committee members making the recommendations determining whether or not you will have the privilege to continue to serve low-income children for less than market rate – on a year by year basis based on assessment scores – are not listed.) Please do not contact me for telephone numbers. I have no such information I am willing to share. Thanks!

At the SECAC meeting held on March 23, 2017, I incorrectly reported only 2 NAEYC accredited child care centers in Mississippi – there are actually, currently 30 and most represent more stable sources of funding than the CCDF. Check it out! Hover your mouse over each blue balloon. (Click here.) 

That is also a gain of 1 since 2007. See the 2007 NAEYC graphic below.

Ten percent, (10%) of child care programs across the nation hold NAEYC accreditation.

HHS has decided the government-child-care-market it created through the Child Care Development Fund over a period of two decades is no longer solely a work support system. It must be redesigned to demonstrate, and qualify (with degrees), and operate (equal) to Head Start and Title I Preschool programs without parity and without sufficient CCDF funding.

SECAC announced Mississippi’s CCDF State Plan was being carried out with NO REQUEST for additional CCDF funding.

Reprinted from Accreditation Update, Fall 2007, a publication of the National Association for the Education of Young Children

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Saturday, Feb. 11th, Mississippi Early Childhood Alliance (MECA) Conference

Mississippi Learning Institute

Mississippi Early Childhood Alliance (MECA) Conference

You are invited to attend the 7th Annual MECA Conference at JSU, which is a partnership between the Childcare Directors Network Alliance (CDNA) and the Mississippi Learning Institute (MLI) at JSU. We strive to provide sessions that will assist you in providing quality educational skills and strategies in early childhood classrooms. Please join us for an exciting educational experience at our conference.

Mississippi Early Childhood Alliance Conference

8:30 a.m.—3:30 p.m.. ♦ Saturday, February 11, 2017

Registration Costs – $25 Per Person

Students with ID – $15 (Please register with your Student email; ex. Student@StateUniverity.edu)

Onsite Registration – $30 Per Person

Continuing Education Units (CEU) & Contact Hours – $20

Jackson State University Student Center – Ballrooms A & B – 3rd Floor

Credit Card Payment Only * No Cash or Personal Checks will be accepted

For conference registration, workshop and presenter submissions, and to learn more about being a corporate or community sponsorship please select the links below:

MECA Registration Form                       Corporate Sponsorship Levels

Other Sponsorship Levels

For media updates about MECA featured on Facebook click here.

MECA Mailing Address:
Mississippi Early Childhood Alliance
1400 John R. Lynch Street
P.O. Box 17066
Jackson State University
Jackson, MS 39217

If you have an questions or need assistance please contact:
Mrs. Latasha B. Hadley, Ed.D.
601-979-2396
Latasha.l.hadley@jsums.edu

Building on Families: the New Early Childhood System

On Wednesday, December 7, 2016, the State Early Childhood Advisory Council (SECAC) and the Mississippi Department of Human Services (MDHS) presented a very rigorous process of maximizing funding and services to families and child care programs by utilizing existing resources through the reauthorization of the CCDBG Act of 2014

Building on Families: the New Early Childhood System

Dec. 7, Jackson, MS – Governor Phil Bryant listens to Dr. Laurie Smith’s SECAC presentation of Mississippi’s New Family-Based Early Childhood System.

‘If a man is laid off and loses his job, he is going to be eligible for work force training. His children are going to be eligible for Medicaid and mental health services. Good nutrition and early learning practices will be introduced to strengthen his home and high quality child care services, Head Start and Pre-K will be available to his family. We are going to build on his family and better equip him, because he seeks the American Dream too.’ 

Governor Phil Bryant

 

MDHS Executive Director John Davis expresses his faith in federal and state partners including CCPP Child Care Providers. Certificates for New Enrollment will be issued in January.

‘We have met with our partners: Work Force Development, state agencies, the Mississippi Community College System and child care providers. We are positioned, now, not to provide isolated services as before, but to maximize our resources and integrate our efforts through common case management, a collaborative referral process, and an integrated data system unlike any other in the country. We can do great and wonderful things!’

MDHS Executive Director John Davis

 

Mississippi Low-Income Child Care Initiative Executive Director Carol Burnett and Cassandra Welchlin intently follow Dr. Smith’s presentation of Standard Child Care and Comprehensive Child Care. MLICCI led a state-wide provider Vote of No Confidence for Mississippi’s Quality Stars.

‘Families in need of services will be embraced at the Point of Entry…when they make application for child care assistance. Parents will be informed of the supports available and referred for early intervention according to individual need and a family service plan. The parent will be informed of child care providers available within the area. Parents will have the option to enroll their children in one of two types of voucher-eligible centers: (1) standard or (2)comprehensive. To be classified as a standard center, a child care center must be licensed and meet minimum federal and state standards. To be classified as a comprehensive center, a child care center must first meet the requirements of a standard center. A comprehensive center must also engage in additional activities specifically designed to improve the quality of the learning experience for three- and four-year-old children. Technical assistance to achieve the comprehensive designation will be available. Once eligible, centers must engage in continuous quality improvement based on a scale that assesses the extent to which a center should engage in additional technical assistance for maintaining and improving quality. 
dsc00812

“This is an answer to prayer. Dr. Laurie Smith’s name will be lifted up high by our church congregation on Sunday!” Patricia Young, Bountiful Blessings, Itta Bena, MS

Click here to review the Mississippi family-based unified and integrated early childhood system in more detail.

A corrective action plan will be developed by an external evaluator in consultation with the child care center director and technical assistance coach.

(Scores will not be used to rank or grade centers.)

SECAC Executive Director Laurie Smith

 

“To pay for the new federal requirements, state officials had to make cuts elsewhere in the budget.  We worked to make sure we are spending as we need to, to make sure we have money to fund everything that we need to fund.” Cathy Sykes, MDHS Deputy Administrator of Federal Programs

MDHS, in collaboration with federal partners, the Mississippi State Department of Health and the Mississippi Community College Board, successfully trained a CCPP workforce of 6500! Other like/needed trainings are to be announced as we move forward. Further, the Mississippi Community College Board (MCCB) will be responsible for managing local early childhood academies. These academies will provide technical assistance, coaching, and training and provide management for the resource and referral offices. Federal partners are requiring that new market rates only begin upon completion of all redeterminations and all enrollment of CCPP child care providers as either Standard Care or Comprehensive Care facilities. The decision as to what the increased market rates will be are almost complete. The new rates are scheduled to begin July 1, 2017. (Current Quality Stars Bonus Payments will continue and remain the same until July 1, 2017.) Certificates for new enrollment may be issued in January, 2017, but for the current rate.’

MDHS Deputy Director of Federal Programs Cathy Sykes

 

dsc00810

New market rates increases will begin July 1, 2017.

 

 

‘We are working to provide a rates increase that will allow low-income child care providers to be able to afford to engage in quality initiatives.’

NSPARC Executive Director Mimmo Parisi

 

‘Thank you for listening to child care providers and for developing technical assistance and training at the Community Colleges.’

Childcare Directors Network Alliance President Deloris Suel

‘Thank you for extending and continuing Resource and Referral. I cannot wait to share this news with Excel by 5 communities.’

Excel by 5 Executive Director Eileen Beazley

For questions that arise during this period of transition, call the MDHS Help Desk at 800-345-6347.


Shrinking the Number of Child Care Providers Down to a Level that May Be Supported by Inefficient CCDF Funding: It’s Economics!

Shrinking the Number of Child Care Providers Down to a Level that May Be Supported by Inefficient CCDF Funding:

It’s Economics!

HHS Market Correction and Government Failure

In economics, market failure is a situation in which the only way for my small business to be better off is for someone else’s business to become worse off.  (Click here.)

The existence of a market failure is often the reason governments may intervene to correct a particular market. ‘Economists are often concerned with the causes of market failure and possible means of correction. Analysis of market failure should play an important role in many types of public policy decisions and studies.

‘However, government policy interventions, such as taxes, subsidies, bailouts, wage and price controls, and regulations (including poorly implemented attempts to correct market failure), may also lead to an inefficient allocation of resources, sometimes called government failure.’

“Government failure occurs when the government intervention causes a more inefficient allocation of goods and resources than would occur without that intervention and when an agency performs inadequately, including when it fails to intervene or does not sufficiently intervene.” (Click here.)

Twice now, I have personally heard State Actors in Mississippi share their thoughts that there are too many licensed child care programs serving low-income children to support the CCDF assisted enrollment needed for each small business to be successful and included in the development of universal Pre-K.

One floated the merger of community-based private businesses while another suggested the Mississippi State Department of Health should just not issue any new child care licenses.

Of course, as was recently pointed out by one representing self-employed child care providers, that is nothing short of economic policy perspective favoring government intervention in the market process to correct the market or as he said, “fascism”.

“Fascism operated from a Social Darwinist view of human relations. The aim was to promote superior individuals and weed out the weak.” (Click here.)

The Propaganda Ministers of Systematic Underinvestment (Government Failure)

Almost two decades ago, the Child Care Development Fund was created as a work force support system to low-income parents transitioning from Welfare to Work.

Many well established, quality child care programs with long waiting lists that received full payment in advance did not have to discount fees or wait to be reimbursed in order to fill vacancies or provide the diversity of mixed socio-economic incomes.

Programs that were willing to participate could only do so in a very limited way due to the losses that would occur as a result of accepting below market rate child care assistance as well as the additional administrative burden of reporting to states for payment.

HHS researched a formula for setting rates that middle income providers would accept – 75% of Current Market Rates.

Even still, there were not enough slots available to absorb the large number of low-income children in sudden need of care.

With the full force of HHS and federal resources, MDHS went out seeking those who would operate child care facilities and be willing to serve low-income children and children of color.

Grants for facilities were made available and SBA loans were granted.

Licensing was assisted and the largely segregated low-income child-care-market was born!

Now, HHS has decided the government-child-care-market it created through the Child Care Development Fund over a period of two decades is no longer solely a work support system. It must be redesigned to demonstrate, and qualify (with degrees), and compare (equal) to Head Start and Title I Preschool programs without sufficient HHS monitoring for leveraged or equal per child stipends (parity) and without sufficient CCDF funding.

HHS has initiated a “market correction” for the redistribution of wealth (the CCDF)…no matter the consequence or social injustice (for the public interest and safety of the children).

HHS has allowed Mississippi to reimburse even Tier I low-income providers at 75% or less of 2004 market rates for over a decade and in spite of three increases in the minimum wage.

In fact, for many years, HHS has accepted many Plans from many states throughout the nation demonstrating inadequate reimbursement fees (falling far below HHS’s “scientifically proven” and recommended rates for providing low-income children access to “high quality” programs).

And when HHS finally did intervene, it diminished the possibility of ever providing “high quality” for child care programs serving large numbers of low-income children (which are so prominent in segregated Mississippi) by requiring states to increase per child reimbursement fees only up to a percentage of 2014 Market Rates as payment to providers in FY 2017-2019 (government failure).

In the recent “Pre-K Collaborative-early-learning -modelonlylobbying-campaign carried out by The Hechinger Report (through the absolute comedy of all white reporters interviewing all white policy makers on “the race issue”), Louise Davis, chair of the Early Years Network, who manages all of Mississippi’s CCDF quality funding, stated that the MOST CRITICAL problem with crippling reimbursements that obstruct quality in low-income child care settings is, “Most of these directors are in it for their heart. They don’t have a business background. These directors … don’t know how to do a budget.”  (Click here.)

The Public Interest

In their paper, “Is Market Failure a Sufficient Condition for Government Intervention?”, economists Art Carden and Steve Horwitz write, “…even when the market provides less than ideal outcomes, government actors will put in place policies that won’t necessarily produce a better market outcome, but may reflect their own priorities.” (Click here.)

Economist Robert Schenk writes, “…those who are involved in government have the same motivations that those in the private sector have; that is, they are motivated by a narrow concept of self-interest: wealth, fame, and power.”

“There is no guarantee that policies made by representatives pursuing their own interests will be in the interests of the society.”  (Click here.)

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services “positioned a study” demonstrating the effects of a child’s physical environment on intellectual and social development.

This developed into a multi-million dollar “quality” industry that includes marketing of programs designed to rate child care centers according to the physical environment, the number of staff with college degrees, and reduced child/staff ratios. These programs are called Quality Rating and Improvement Systems.

In all this time of HHS endorsed “QRIS”, this is what we have learned:

In 1999, a comprehensive, longitudinal study by the RAND Corporation of Colorado’s QRIS program, one of the longest-running in the country, found Q.R.I.S. programs are expensive and complicated to administer, that state funding to sustain QRIS in the future may not be available, and worse, QRIS programs do not raise learning or social development outcomes for students. (Click here.)

Fourteen years later, QRIS proved no better!

In 2013, Education Week Reported “Child-Care Rating Systems Earn Few Stars” and said the tool falls short in predicting quality. Researchers, “who were from several universities, found that children attending highly rated pre-K programs did not have significantly better results in math, pre-reading, language, and social skills when they finished the programs, compared with the children attending lower-rated programs.” (Click here.)

Gail L. Zellman, the principal investigator on the Qualistar study for RAND, said:

 “The field has not sufficiently determined how to evaluate quality and how to assess it in a valid way.”

So, why the continued and heavy push for QRIS?

Perhaps government market correction in spite of government failure and an inefficient CCDF – without stimulus – requires the “excludability policy” QRIS provides.

Excludability

“Excludability deals with the ability of agents to control who uses their commodity, and for how long – and the related costs associated with doing so.” (Click here.)

“A public good is excludable if you can prevent somebody from using it.” (Click here.)

QRIS allows states to draft a tool that will be used to exclude child care programs in the “public interest” market correction for “improved” school readiness and social development.

In Mississippi’s Early Learning Collaborative Act of 2013, QRIS is the tool used for child care excludability.

In the RFP for stabilizing MDHS Slots Contracts, QRIS was the tool of excludability.

In the only opportunity to receive anything above a percentage of 2004 Market Rates in Mississippi in more than a decade, QRIS was/is the tool of excludability.

Re-write Mississippi Quality Stars if you want, but QRIS will still be the tool of excludability!

Add a “State Approved” curriculum if you like; QRIS will still be the tool of excludability!

QRIS, by design, redistributes the wealth to those programs more financially able to participate in costly (so-called) improvements in the first place, deepening class disparity and inequality.  (According to the MLICCI Step-Up  QRIS research, the average amount of “up-front” funding that it takes a center to move from a 1-star to a 2-star rating is approximately $40,000 per center.) See SECAC QRIS Executive Summary by clicking here.

It does not necessarily result in a socially desirable distribution of resources or the overall well-being of society.

For instance, MDHS is required, in the State Plan to raise reimbursement fees from 2004 Market Rates to 2014 Market Rates, increase quality funding, begin to monitor 1,200 hundred in-home providers who are not licensed, serve the same number of children (HHS doesn’t specify whether or not MDHS must maintain children in full-time care and part-time care), set re-determination for a true calendar year regardless of ongoing parental employment, and all is to be done with little or no new funding.

Such demand by HHS can only be met if child care programs are weeded out, and the wealth is redistributed, in some cases, in a way counterproductive to quality.

HHS “washes its’ hands” of the actual market correction applicability, the populations that are helped and harmed by its policies and potential disparate impact culpability through a little thing called “states’ flexibility” or the “State Plan”.

HHS stops just short of requiring QRIS as such, but it does require states to report how they will move more children into “high quality” care as defined by the state.

Class Disparity and Inequality

Nowhere is the class disparity and inequality brought on by HHS intervention (and often, the failure to intervene) better demonstrated than in The Hechinger Report’s article, “The Race Issue”:

“In visits to 30 child care centers in central Mississippi, reporters saw centers split along lines of race and class.”

“There is a direct link between how much parents can pay and how much a child care center can charge that, in turn, dictates the size of daycare budgets for salaries and supplies. Many centers serving low-income black children can’t offer the same resources as those that cater to middle- and upper-middle class white children, such as expensive playgrounds, highly educated teachers or lower-than-required staff-to-child ratios.”

“The reimbursement a family receives for child care tuition varies depending on a child’s age and family income, but assistance only covers a percentage of a center’s tuition. That means centers that serve low-income children often receive reimbursements that cover only a fraction of what it actually costs to run a daycare.” (Click here.)

Disparate Impact

There are other laws to be considered by HHS and government actors when adopting CCDF policy including the Small Business Administration Act, the Unfunded Mandates Act, Administrative Procedures Law, The Takings Clause, and the Title VII Civil Rights Act – all which may have been ignored at times. It is either that, or there has been too little uniform reporting gathered by HHS for it to truly determine if its policies governing low-income child care have resulted in socially desirable distribution of resources or if they have resulted in further class disparity and inequality.

Many argue HHS Policies are deepening the cycle of poverty for low-income working parents and the low-income child care industry that HHS seeks to correct – often which are minority owned and disadvantaged small businesses.

Under Title VII Civil Rights Act, disparate impact theory involves a claim that a facially neutral practice is being applied in a manner as to disadvantage members of a protected class.

December 1, 2015, (six months ago) the Mississippi Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights issued an Advisory Memorandum to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights regarding the Committee’s months long investigation of the federal Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) and related programs, and the potential for disparate impact on the basis of race or color as a result of the State’s discretionary administration of these funds. The investigation and subsequent Memorandum found that many eligible children, predominantly within the African-American community, were not serviced by the subsidy program and that funding that should have gone to support eligible children was redirected. (Click here.)

The investigation also found that the program rating system used in Mississippi to promote higher quality childcare limited the participation of African-American owned and operated childcare facilities.

The Mississippi Committee recommended the HHS Office of Child Care should conduct or commission a thorough study of the validity of the QRIS evaluation criteria as a predictive measure of improved developmental outcomes for children. This study should include a review of evaluation outcomes in diverse communities to ensure criteria are culturally relevant to diverse populations, and that they do not unduly disadvantage any particular protected class. (Click here.)

I know of no such HHS investigation that is now in the works – my point exactly!

In fact, the HHS Office of Child Care declined to participate in the Mississippi Committee’s panel discussions in the first place.

March 14, 2016, by majority vote, the United States Commission on Civil Rights (“Commission”), issued a letter recommending program changes to the Child Care Subsidies Distribution Program in the state of Mississippi within the purview of the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) and Health and Human Service (HHS). (Click here.)

Commission Chairman Martin R. Castro on behalf of a majority of the Commission stated, “When the most vulnerable and needy children are prevented from accessing urgently needed resources because of their race, color or other improper reasons, it is the role of this Commission and our State Advisory Committees to demand action and changes. To fail to heed these recommendations by our Mississippi State Advisory Committee will continue to doom a generation of children to living in the cycle of poverty—and that must not be allowed.”

The Commission stated:

“The Quality Rating and Improvement Systems (QRIS) program which is purported to promote higher quality child care appears to instead penalize and costs so much that it excludes the participation of African-American owned and operated child care facilities.”

During Mississippi Committee hearings, CLASP reported that Mississippi saw a decline of 53 percent in the number of low-income children served between 2006 and 2013.

Since 2013, the number of licensed child care programs overall has shrunk from 1,800 to 1,500 while the number of less costly, unlicensed in-home providers has increased (redistribution of wealth/child care on the cheap). Where is the “highly qualified teacher” in unlicensed, in-home care?

HHS mandates do not necessarily result in a socially desirable distribution of resources or the overall well-being of society.

Mississippi Quality Stars

In just over the decade that the Mississippi Early Childhood Institute has received millions and millions of dollars to serve as administrator of Mississippi’s Quality Stars, and many millions more have been awarded to provide technical assistance to improve “quality” in child care, Mississippi, at its’ most recent assessment reported (61%) were rated as 1 Star – the lowest level.

After ten years, less than 20% or 74 of only 383 programs participating (including those enrolled in CLASS.) were rated at the 3, 4- or 5-Star levels required to participate in Pre-K or be deemed “high quality”.

“Monica May, director of the QRIS program, said the program trains evaluators to be consistent. ” (Click here.)

“May said some complaints of racial bias in QRIS may stem from the way the quality rating system started out in the state.”

“In 2011, the state adopted a more comprehensive quality rating program, which also included efforts to help centers improve.”

Yet, in 2015, External Evaluation of QRIS Conducted by the Frank Porter-Graham Group revealed the following truths:

  • In a block structure, fewer than 20% of programs earned a Level 3 or 4; in the point and hybrid structures, more than 70% of programs achieved a Level 3 or 4. Block structures generally provide greater challenges to improvement in ratings. Mississippi continues with the block scoring system in spite of the known and growing popularity of the less stringent hybrid scoring system.
  • Nationally, the most common classroom observation reassessment period is every 3 years. Mississippi requires reassessment annually unless a program wants to maintain its current rating in which case it is every 2 years.
  • Mississippi’s Quality Stars system is the only system in the nation that requires providers to finance and maintain a parent resource center.
  • There is no due process for appealing a score.

Click here to review the evaluation and see pages 22-23 for low provider participation rates.

Seventy-five percent of Mississippi providers have rejected QRIS as a measure of quality.

MDHS has planned to continue with Quality Stars anyway without conducting a statewide quality needs assessment as required by HHS.

Rather, MDHS manipulated a survey presented only to parents of children enrolled in the few child care programs participating in QRIS.

In June, 2015, Mississippi appointed a Mississippi Quality Stars Re-write Committee.

I do not know who the members of that committee are. I am told it’s a secret.

Notice of their meetings is not posted on the web site or the Mississippi Public Meeting Transparency Website as required by Mississippi Code Section A 025-0041-0013. (Click here.)

I have also not been able to locate the committee’s minutes online.

Minutes must be recorded within 30 days and are a public record and must reflect the members present and absent; any votes taken; etc. (Click here.)

I have suggested that all the information be posted to the agency’s appropriate web page in order to practice transparency and inform stakeholders.

For now, it is either top secret and classified or requires that I travel to inspect the record and minutes at MDHS State Office.

Economics

The correct and effective use of available resources and economics is the study of how people deal with scarcity.

The State Early Childhood Advisory Council has been charged with the implementation of the 2017 – 2019 CCDF State Plan.

SECAC has appointed many committees and work groups to carry out this work.

Notice of some committee meetings has been posted on the SECAC Upcoming Meetings Page. (Click here.)

All SECAC Committee meetings and sub-committee meetings are also governed by the Mississippi Open Meetings Act and Mississippi Code Section A 025-0041-0013.

Therefore, self-employed child care providers and all who are personally vested (with commercial loans) or interested parties and stakeholders may be informed and attend as many meetings as they wish.

There are choices other than QRIS that may really improve quality.

They do not have to be embedded into QRIS to be successful.

If government actors insist only on embedding other quality initiatives into QRIS, then they are, in fact, insisting on retaining the “power of excludability” that may forever “evolve” to suit their funding priorities.

(If most severe exclusion has been done to us once, it can be done again.)

SECAC is looking now to develop a successful low-income child care early learning model.

Mississippi Building Blocks is such a model.

MBB improves the lives of children and it does not require QRIS.

We should not support or participate in ongoing, most stringent excludability policy and potential disparate impact.

Economics is a science of choice making and making the best choice among alternatives given inefficient CCDF funding and government failure.

If that cannot be accomplished without all/greatest harm to just one sector of Mississippi’s early learning system, then HHS and all government actors should be held to account.


Remove 3134 Children from Licensed Child Care?

Remove 3134 Children from Licensed Child Care?

 “Even a great batter needs a team to win!”

The general power point presentation recently provided by the Mississippi Department of Education to the State Early Childhood Advisory Council left many questions regarding the MDE proposal for a federal Pre-K grant.

In particular, why would MDE go off on its own to develop a conflicting early learning application and circumvent the expertise, talent and official capacity of the State Early Childhood Advisory Council and the SECAC goal to revise the Quality Rating System and improve access to quality early learning programs for high-needs children in child care?  (Click here to read SECAC goals.)

What is clear?

Individuals responsible for alleged defamation and bias against child care capacity and extreme policy adversely impacting the child care industry have apparently found a comfortable “home” at MDE.

 “High Quality From Day 1”

That part of the presentation was a clear giveaway to me! So I asked, “Did MDE contract with Rachel Canter and Mississippi First to develop this Pre-K grant?”

“Yes.”

In her preliminary Pre- Collaborative Legislative Brief, Rachel Canter either framed the discussion or repeated what the MSU Early Childhood Institute has framed for conclusion on quality in the child care industry and QRIS:

“The QCCSS is an important step in identifying subpar centers, though the rating system does not directly measure child learning. Regrettably, the ratings of participating centers have not been released publicly, although DHS reports that it is working to release scores of individual QCCSS participants on a new website. According to information in the state’s Race to the Top-Early Learning Challenge Fund proposal, most rated centers scored below a 3 with a plurality scoring a 1, the lowest score. These results indicate that the private childcare market does not have the capacity to serve as a pre-K substitute without significant quality improvements.”

She either does not understand or it did not benefit her Pre-K model to explain that a score of 1 is given to a child care program upon QRIS enrollment and that program may be assigned that rating up to one year or until QRIS evaluation takes place.

Regardless, it is a convoluted notion of the “Improvement” component and technical Assistance provided to QRIS participating providers. Colleagues may not be incorrect in saying her remarks constitute defamation with discriminatory overtones – QRIS is not designed as a tool for identifying “those” to be culled out of federal or state programs.

Jill Dent is the Pre-K Collaborator Director for MDE. She is the former Director of DECCD who led DHS into defeat in a law suit for her failure to provide the economic impact of XEROX echildcare on small child care business.  She was also responsible for an investigation/reprimand from HHS to DHS for reducing assistance provided to low-income parents from full-time fees to part-time fees by denying payment to providers for the time it took parents to collect their children after work – a serious federal “reasonable distance” violation of the TANF Block Grant. Although corrected with the help of Congressman Bennie Thompson, many providers have still not received all the full-time fees for the full-time care provided that she denied…and never will.

 “A Quick Google of ‘Pre-K Access’”

ARIZONA

DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

First Things First Pre-K Expansion & Collaboration Grant Guidance Manual

A specific minimum percentage of funding must be made available to community-based providers as contractually required and may be increased incrementally to reflect deeper investments in the mixed service delivery model.

GEORGIA

DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

Proprietary providers brought an important ingredient to the program— facilities. In many states across the nation, a lack of appropriate facilities stands as one of the major obstacles in developing universal Prekindergarten programs. Including private non-profit and for-profit child care providers into a state-based early education program significantly enhances program capacity and support. Program administrators had to face the reality that an increasingly powerful and competitive proprietary child care industry is prepared to fight to protect its customer base. Participation by proprietary child care providers depends in large measure on funding rates and projected revenues. Policy makers and administrators must understand how to work with organizations and institutions with diverse cultures, priorities, and goals.

TEXAS

DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

Texas’s pre-K pilot program combines a mixed delivery system composed of public and private providers and consultant services from a third-party expert, the Center for Improving the Readiness of Children for Learning and Education (CIRCLE) at the University of Texas. Beginning in the 2006–07 school year, school districts are required to show how they are collaborating with community-based providers in order to receive expansion grant funds.

COLORADO

DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

Colorado utilizes local boards to administer pre-K block grants, but board members are appointed by school district superintendents. As a result, school districts are the primary participants and funding is allocated based on the needs of the school district rather than the needs of individual families. Public school districts that administer pre-K funds have few incentives to contract with qualified competitors.

OKLAHOMA

DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

Oklahoma created a pilot pre-K program in 1980, also with school districts as gatekeepers. Oklahoma has one of the nation’s highest percentages of pre-K enrollment, and both public and private providers are eligible, yet parents do not have much by way of choice.

 “It is Science”

Jimella Harris says:        

“It is a given that licensing, accreditation (health and safety), professional teachers, child-teacher ratios, and better pay, all contribute to high-quality preschool and impact children entering kindergarten ready to learn. It is not a given that high-quality preschool should be absorbed into the K-12 bureaucracy.

LEAs’ monopolistic and silo propensities are not conducive to strong partnerships with outside programs.

The funding mechanisms they create will either support existing pre-K programs or supplant the largest segment of the pre-K through 12 education system offering parental choice.

States can also feed the money directly into public school systems to create an additional grade (pre-K).

Stephen Goldsmith, a professor of government and director of the Ash Institute’s Innovations in American Government Program at Harvard University’s Kennedy School draws the following conclusion:

“States that choose to direct funds primarily toward public schools risk eliminating today’s diverse ECE provider market and replacing it with a one-size-fits-all model like the one that ails the K–12 system.

Expanding and improving the existing ECE system will produce higher-quality outcomes than a monopolistic approach to pre-K education. In a market-based system that ties funding to children, everyone benefits. Parents exercise control over and participate in the education of their children, children receive optimal and equitable care, high-quality private providers remain in business, and states optimize their pre-K expenditures.

Leverage the existing system. Building on the infrastructure already in place not only guarantees that diverse and flexible solutions remain available, but also allows the state to leverage any new investment.”

 “MDE Draft Pre-K Grant Proposal”

Adding Title I- or district-funded preK classrooms and Head Start, Mississippi will serve close to 60% of its four-year-olds in no-cost, high-quality preK programs.

All collaboratives funded through the grant will be required to make a 1:1 match. Many of the collaboratives will make this match all or in part by leveraging two sources—Title I dollars and Head Start dollars. By using these dollars as a match, collaboratives can extend the reach of their current programs without reducing children served because the same dollar can now serve twice as many children

NO LEVERAGE WRITTEN INTO THE GRANT FOR CHILD CARE DEVELOPMENT FUND DOLLARS or IDENTIFIED HEAD START/CHILD CARE PARTNERSHIPS OR TITLE I/CHILD CARE PARTNERSHIPS:

Each proposed collaborative has a plan for providing a 1:1 match of these grant funds as well as a tentative sustainability plan.

Although there is no formal coordination between the Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG) and the state-funded program, childcare centers are allowed to match state funds with parent tuition dollars (low-income?) as well as the child care certificates provided through CCDBG.”

Cost per child: Mississippi used a cost-per-child estimate based on the 2013 Head Start per-child cost in Mississippi. This cost estimate is $6,222.

Cost per child less the local match: Mississippi estimated that participating preK collaboratives will make a 1:1 match, meaning the grant-funded per-child cost would be $3,111.”

In Mississippi, it has been published that the average cost of a cert is $2,200 per year.

Under this scheme, the loss to low-income providers serving low-income children is -$911 dollars per child or$9,110 per classroom right from the start- insufficient for participation.

Providers would not be able to sign an upfront MOA stating that they can sustain costs as reimbursed by MDE as follows:

Subsidies will decrease over the four years of the grant according to the timetable below: Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Year 4
100% 75% 50% 25%

“Patronizing “

“Preventing a diminution of programs serving children from birth through age five” (all the while demonstrating known harm to private child care.)

“Because the collaborative model enables all providers to participate in the preK system, each type of provider benefits. For childcare centers who typically serve children from birth to five, one of collaboration’s greatest benefits is that participation helps them remain financially viable by continuing to serve four-year-old children. ” (?????????)

The proposed new collaboratives also include private childcare partners. Xx of the 25 contain one or more private childcare partners. Over time, Mississippi hopes that more private childcare partners will join collaboratives as more providers learn about the collaboratives and as funds increase.

On Wednesday afternoon, October 8, 2014, SECAC member Danny Sprietler, who previously, openly objected to any grant taking children out of child care and who could find no legislation or statute giving MDE the authority to add another grade level to k-12, made the motion that SECAC give a STRONG LETTER OF SUPPORT.

The motion was unanimously supported, even by those individuals representing private child care programs!!

Remove 3134 Children from Licensed Child Care?

It appears that is the plan!

Since the adoption of the Mississippi Early Learning Collaborative Act, the number of licensed child care programs has decreased from over 1,700 to 1,503.

 


MLICCI to Present Findings of First Such QRIS Study in the Nation!

MLICCI_August_2nd

cwelchlin@mschildcare.org


Post of 7 Years Still Relevant in 2021: Little or No Recognized Child Care Leadership Appointments to SECAC

Post of 7 Years Still Relevant in 2021: Little or No Recognized Child Care Leadership Appointments to SECAC

The Definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.

When we aired legitimate concerns to members of SECAC during a period of time which has revealed 97,000,000 dollars embezzled from programs serving low-income children and the MSDH failure to provide new enrollment for child care assistance for five consecutive years, NOT ONE member ever cared enough to reach out to us in concern.

In fact, SECAC members enabled the adoption of a quality program with the authority to eliminate our participation without ever requesting the rules – and there were none.  Not one member of SECAC – including the appointed representation of the child care industry – ever, ever questioned such violation of Administrative Procedures Law and Racial Discrimination as determined for Mississippi’s QRIS by the US Commission on Civil Rights.

As some SECAC members received their program funding and budgets as sub-grantees, they ignored Ethics rules and child care providers struggling to serve low-income children through the CCDF.

And here we go again.

We do not know how newly appointed child care providers were selected to represent us on SECAC. In fact, we do not even know who some of them are.

SECAC should take the lead from the Mississippi Department of Health Child Care Licensing Division.  When vacancies become available on the Child Care Advisory Board, all licensed providers are notified and invited to apply.

Mississippi will never thrive or address learning loss with the same leadership, however distributed now or with whatever agency they are with now, until state actors actually value and seek the best work of the most capable and involved child care provider leadership.

One More Time, y’all :

There is a rule in Mississippi Child Care: School aged children and entry-level toddlers may not co-exist.  You simply do not mix the babies in with the big kids on the playground, or someone may get hurt!

That is the health and safety measure provider members throughout the state had hoped for when the Mississippi Association of Licensed Child Care Providers successfully lobbied for positions of one licensed provider from each Congressional District to be appointed to the State Early Childhood Advisory Council as a requirement of the Early Learning Collaborative Act of 2013.

Among MALCCP child care providers (operating licensed child care) in positions of top leadership are an ivy league graduate WITH THE COVETED Early Childhood Degree who also studied and trained in the system where kindergarten began – Germany; another who has professionally evaluated the Q.R.I.S. (results soon to be released), worked to advance early learning curriculum in an east Mississippi school district and has been recognized nationally for work to empower low-income families; and a provider who serves on the Jackson State University Pre-K Planning Committee and the Pre-K Common Core Alignment Committee in Jackson Public Schools.

Such accomplished child care leaders also have experience opposing SECAC “Big Kids” such as: MDHS Executive Director Ricky Berry in the adoption of Xerox e-Childcare™ designed to pay less reimbursement (as a savings to the state) for the preschool environments low-income children attend; Child Care Licensing Supervisor Vickey Berryman in the re-measurements and maximum capacity reductions of Existing (old) child care facilities and alleged Constitutional violation of Due Process of Law; Allies and Excel by 5 in proposals to require poorly performing ITERS/ECERS ONLY (from which many such quasi-agencies around the SECAC table draw millions in CCDF funds to offer technical assistance) on licensed child care programs wishing to participate in Mississippi’s universal pre-school.

Unfortunately, peer vetted, strong representation of child care appears to be precisely the work early learning policy-makers continue to isolate.

LITTLE or No recognized child care leadership appointments were made to SECAC.

For our effort and to my knowledge, MALCCP leadership was not even invited to make recommendations as an organization for appointments to SECAC!

We are invited to give comment from the gallery…without a vote.

Have we been robbed of our work to have knowledgeable and highly visible child care leadership at the policy making table?

Was it the intent of legislators to lure our organization into a “false sense of security” that child care leadership would be invited to participate in the development and planning of early learning?

You need to ask your legislators to answer that question, but only time will truly tell.

For now, actions speak louder than words – we little Mississippi child care providers are at high risk of being trampled outside…some more.

Of course, if my goals might possibly include continued unfunded mandates and disproportionate “adverse impact” on licensed child care, I wouldn’t give practiced opposition a vote either!   🙂

No recess here!

We must continue to work for quality and equality in early learning through other venues.


Dept. of Ed Requires First Phase QRIS and Scores Absent APL!

Dept. of Ed Requires First Phase QRIS and Scores Absent APL! 

The Associated Press reports the competition is fierce among groups applying for preschool money.

“The Department of Education says 72 groups have indicated interest in the money, which is supposed to fund at least 1,325 spots statewide.”

“About 50 of the community consortiums are led by public school districts, while the rest are led by private child care centers or nonprofit groups. Some led by private child care centers could be ineligible, because the law specifies that a community group must be led by a school or nonprofit.”

Providers noted right away the original legislation drafted by Rachel Cantor and sponsored by Senator Brice Wiggins also required participating child care programs to participate in this State’s very poor performing QRIS…which would have left 97% of all licensed child care ineligible right from the start!

A recent national study concludes that after more than 14 years of implementation, QRIS systems still do not improve school readiness or learning outcomes for young children. 

Click here to read the Education Week publication, “Child-Care Rating Systems Earn Few Stars in Study.”

Another long-term study now being concluded by the Mississippi Low-Income Child Care Initiative has revealed Mississippi’s Quality Stars scoring method is both subjective and inconsistent.

Even Mississippi’s recent Race to the Top-Early Learning Challenge application acknowledges the need and lays out a plan to validate costly QRIS through child outcomes.

So, if current and removed QRIS is not valid and does not improve school readiness, who is insisting it be included now as one pre-requisite for Pre-K participation?

Read on.

During the 2013 legislative session, the Mississippi Association of Licensed Child Care Providers successfully lobbied to have QRIS or any specific measure of quality removed from the Early Learning Collaborative Act as a requirement of participation until 2016, in hopes that either a validated measure of quality will be developed in that time or it will be more widely accepted that “smoke and mirrors” QRIS does not raise academic achievement or justify implementation costs.

However, following the close of the legislative session and sometime after meeting with Representative Toby Barker and Senator Brice Wiggins, the Mississippi Department of Ed.’s Tracina Green and others put the QRIS requirement back in as child care “policy without benefit of the required exercise in Administrative Procedures.

Further, MDE requested a large budget increase above and beyond the scheduled incremental pre-kindergarten funding expansions and NOT the first day of state funded preschool has taken place yet!

Why didn’t MDE recommend that more than $11,000,000 in quality funding now supporting the legislatively removed QRIS be used, instead, to fund expanded pre-kindergarten programs in child care programs which meet all other qualifications and offer full day, full year Universal pre-k options to working families?

Emails to Representative Toby Barker have gone unanswered.

Two requests to MDE’s Robin Lemonis for identification of the task force members MDE appointed to advise in pre-school implementation have gone unanswered.

Many providers are guessing that MDE task force relationships will likely link to programs funded by or programs partnering with those currently funded through QRIS – a screening tool that may very well claim disparate intent and “narrowing of the competitive field” as its greatest achievements thus far!

Others have turned wide-spread discussion of this MDE conduct into a humorous game show of sorts to just Name the First Wave of Pre-K Awards

Gameshow 3

Let us join in the fun!

Identify the Players from the above text! 

Which programs do you think will receive First Wave Pre-K Funding?

Send in your Answers!

(Participating child care providers/educators will remain anonymous.)

It will be great fun to look back and see how correct we are/were when MDE awards are finally announced!

Gameshow 2

In the meantime, the Mississippi Association of Licensed Child Care Providers’ Executive Committee will meet soon to determine the much more serious nature and course of its response to the Department of Education’s interpretation of the Early Learning Collaborative Act.


Honesty and Fairness should always be the governing rule! Miss. Space Requirement is About 50 sq. ft. Per Child!

Honesty and Fairness should always be the governing rule! Miss. Space Requirement is About 50 sq. ft. Per Child!

At the Child Care Advisory Council meeting held last Friday, October 18, 2013, MDH Licensure Staff member Festus Simkins reported to Council members that he didn’t know where this notion of 50 square feet per child came from.

That was not a truthful statement.

I refreshed his memory.

In 2000 – 2001, I had an administrative hearing for two reductions in maximum capacity that MDH Attorney Ellen O’Neal, Festus Simkins and others participated in.  Although the newly required 50 square feet per child was not disclosed to me or my attorney during the course of that hearing, questions posed to me by MDH attorneys were suspect.

“When your licensed maximum capacity was first determined in 1986, was furniture in the facility?”

Following that meeting, I googled “square footage in child care and furniture” and discovered National Health and Safety: Caring for Our Children, First Edition, STANDARD 5.112 SPACE REQUIRED PER CHILD.

STANDARD                                                                                                                                             The designated areas for children’s activities shall contain a minimum of 35 square feet per child, 50 square feet measured on the inside, wall to wall dimensions. The spaces are exclusive of food preparation areas of the kitchen, bathrooms, toilets, areas for the care of ill children, offices, staff rooms, corridors, hallways, stairways, closets, lockers, laundry, furnace rooms, cabinets, and storage shelving spaces.

COMMENTS                                                                                                                                          The 35 square feet of available play space per child should be free of furniture and equipment. With a usual furnishing load, this space usually amounts to 50 square feet measured wall to wall.

I lost my administrative hearing because I did not have that information in a timely fashion. (I have been reduced in earning capacity and licensed maximum capacity by 11 children for more than 12 years now.)

Therefore, I attended what I call the 2001 planned, “make it right public hearing” to amend the Regulations Governing Child Care by proposing to allow MDH to ‘re-measure’ existing child care facilities by current standards at any time at the discretion of the licensing agency.

In the presence of Mr. Simkins, BOH member Dr. Ray Foxworth and others, I objected and revealed the exact language and explanation of 50 square feet per child that Mr. Simkins had failed to provide.

Dr, Foxworth responded, “We can’t do that.”

Mr. Simkins responded, “We could just go ahead and say 50 square feet.”

Dr. Foxworth concluded, “No!  We can’t require that.”

For some reason, approval granting MDH licensing staff the authority to apply the new square footage requirement of 50 square feet per child to existing businesses was adopted anyway without benefit of an Economic Impact Statement or explanation of its effect.

Child Care providers have a right to know the truth in space requirements – particularly those opting to participate in a pre-kindergarten collaborative.

It is the exact standard applied by the Mississippi Department of Education governing NEW CONSTRUCTION of Mississippi pre-kindergarten classrooms that Mr. Simkins reviewed.

Developers, architects and bankers should know!  In fact, it could even be said that the failure of MDH to reveal the whole truth of 50 square feet per child has resulted in denying many children the value of a “high quality” environment in new construction from the time the true impact of the enforcement – 50 square feet per child – was concealed.

The Child Care Advisory Council and Board of Health should be aware of the MDH alleged practice of adverse “re-measurement” regulations adoptions for existing businesses through alleged ongoing failure to follow Administrative Procedures Law and should not be influenced only by “licensing staff pontificating” or duped into giving approval for continued alleged misuse of authority such as we may have recently seen in the adoption of the clarification only” of “maximum capacity per classroom” and accessed fines to providers for violation of said regulation…which does not exist.

Honesty and Fairness should always be the governing rule!

I am thankful to Council members Judy Prine and Deloris Suel for hearing my comments to the Council without prejudice and as a result, raising the questions needed.

There should be and always should have been a grandfather clause.

The “maximum capacity of a room” for existing businesses should be rescinded.

The total square footage needed to provide a reliable licensed maximum capacity should be revealed and put into clear, concise language in the Regulations Governing Child Care by age group.

I choose No Tricks for me or you during this Halloween season!

If you would like to learn more, click here and review the National Health and Safety: Caring for Our Children, Second Edition.

See page 257 to review the Standard governing Space Required Per Child and download for your records.

Click here to Learn more about Mississippi’s Early Learning Guidelines governing the Space Required Per Child in existing structures in public schools,  (20 children in a total of 600 square feet shared with furnishings and equipment).

See page 13,   4.0 Physical Settings for Existing Structures.

Compare the difference.


It is nice to be validated! We are! QRIS is not – Yet !

It is nice to be validated! We are! QRIS is not – Yet!

At last year’s MsECA Capitol Day, Senator Brice Wiggins allegedly described the MALCCP lobby as “trouble makers” for removing Mississippi’s failed QRIS as a requirement for pre-kindergarten participation.

Congratulations to us!  Our group of rabble-rouser has now joined the ranks of scientific researchers from several leading universities!

Education Week (September 11, 2013) reported the findings of the most recent QRIS study published in the journal, Science.

“Children attending highly rated pre-K programs did not have significantly better results in math, pre-reading, language, and social skills when they finished the programs, compared with the children attending lower-rated programs”.

(If that sounds familiar, these new results are much like the Rand Corporation’s study of Colorado’s Qualistar program conducted fourteen years ago!)

Study co-author Robert C. Pianta, the dean of the education school at the University of Virginia and the creator of the CLASS evaluation instrument, said:

“We’re really rolling out a big policy without knowing what the consequences of that policy might or might not be.”

Gail L. Zellman, the principal investigator on the Qualistar study for RAND, said:

“The field has not sufficiently determined how to evaluate quality and how to assess it in a valid way.”

During the 2013 legislative session, the Mississippi Association of Licensed Child Care Providers worked with Representative Toby Barker and other legislators to amend the Early Learning Collaborative Act – which is now law – to allow child care providers participating in state funded pre-kindergarten education until 2016 to select an acceptable measure of quality.  It was our hope that in all that time, a measure of quality would be developed which could actually demonstrate improved outcomes for low-income children.

Sadly, after meeting with Senator Brice Wiggins and Representative Toby Barker following the close of the legislative session, the State Department of Education wrongly concluded that each Collaboration would select a required and current measure of quality for child care providers wishing to participate in state funded pre-kindergarten.

Once fully aware of that error, SDE continued as if the law didn’t matter. They spent State time and State money surveying other states on QRIS and began work to develop a pre-approved list of current instruments and selection criteria for Quality Classroom Measures designed to document classroom quality for childcare providers – without any input from MALCCP or benefit of administrative procedures.

That is the same conduct exhibited by Jill Dent and MDHS when it more than doubled its funding of Quality Stars ITERS and ECERS from $1,000,000 in FFY 2012 to $2,048,248 in FFY 2013  regardless of alleged disparate impact and very poor performance statewide after six years of implementation and before any kind of evaluation.

Now the plot thickens.

Well financed foundations and non-profits supporting ITERS, ECERS and other largely invalidated QRIS components are beginning a cycle of highly publicized speaking engagements throughout the state promoting such collaboration and laying the foundation for an expected request for still more pre-k funding for the same during the 2014 legislative session – before the first round has been funded or evaluated by PEER!

Who is to significantly benefit from such pre-k leadership if not low-income children?

Join the ranks of some of the greatest minds in education!,

Visit your legislators!

Make some “trouble” by sharing this information and hold your heads high!

We are right.

QRIS is not validated – yet!

No amount of debarment and disrespect for the capacity of self-employed child care providers will change that!

(Click here to read the Washington Policy Center’s conclusion of the Rand study: “The research shows that QRIS programs are expensive and difficult to administer, that state funding to sustain QRIS in the future may not be available, that QRIS programs do not raise learning or social development outcomes for students.”)

(Click here to read the Education Week publication, “Child-Care Rating Systems Earn Few Stars in Study.”)