Smart Start Conference A Success!

Friday, May 06th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

Gov. Perdue said, "All of the work you do. It's not a do good program. The work you do is an economic investment in NC. Smart Start is an economic investment."

Thanks to all of those who helped make the 2011 National Smart Start Conference such a success! We were thrilled that so many of you could join us for a week of fresh ideas, inspiration, and fun!

We’d like to say a special thank you to all of our keynote speakers for taking the time to share their wisdom, experience, and passion.

  • North Carolina Governor Beverly Perdue
  • Rich Niemand of the Niemand Collaborative
  • North Carolina Lt. Governor Walter Dalton
  • Former North Carolina Governor Jim Hunt
  • David Lawrence, Jr., Chairman of The Children’s Trust

 

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CEO of La Noticia Supports Smart Start

Friday, May 06th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

“As a newspaper owner, I believe Smart Start provides children with the basic skills to learn with self-confidence and hope as they grow into adults. They will compete in a global market as future citizens, employees, and employers. They will be voters and decision makers on health care, education, and the laws that govern our state and country. Their decisions will be built on today’s foundation. “
—Hilda H. Gurdian, CEO, La Noticia, Inc

FACT: Quality early childhood education lays the groundwork for North Carolina’s economic future by preparing upcoming generations for school and workplace. Studies show that Smart Start improves the language and math skills that prepare children for kindergarten and future success.

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A Real, Unnecessary Crisis for Families

Tuesday, May 03rd, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

During this morning’s National Smart Start Conference keynote address, presenter Rich Niemand referenced an article in today’s NY Times. The article begins:

Ben Bernanke, the Federal Reserve chairman, made a strong argument for good early childhood care. In a speech in New York City, he argued that the value can be especially high for disadvantaged children with a strong payoff for the economy. These programs can increase high school graduation rates, and graduates earn more, pay more taxes, and rely less on state-provided health care.

Read the full article in the NY Times.

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Smart Start Receives Clean Audit Report

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

RALEIGH-For the ninth consecutive year, The North Carolina Partnership for Children, Inc. (NCPC) has a “clean bill” of financial health, according to the Office of State Auditor. An audit of Fiscal Year 2009-2010 Smart Start activities found the organization was in compliance and had appropriate internal controls. NCPC is the organization that oversees Smart Start and is audited annually.

In the past ten years, NCPC and Smart Start local partnerships have been audited more than 450 times by State auditors and/or independent auditors hired by the state. NCPC has had no audit findings for the past nine years. In the past two years, 77 partnerships were audited, and had no findings.

Auditors look for compliance in three core areas: accuracy of financial statements; how the partnership processes and authorizes transactions such as grants, accounts payable, payroll and cash receipts; and contract compliance.

“Smart Start is a public-private partnership with the highest standards of accountability. This latest clean audit reflects those high standards. Smart Start is a trusted partner that works effectively and efficiently to serve young children,” said Dr. Olson Huff, Chair of the NCPC Board of Directors.

Smart Start is an early childhood leadership network that leverages private and public dollars to address issues critical to North Carolina’s young children and future workforce. The initiative serves all 100 North Carolina counties and is administered by 77 local Smart Start partnerships that create community-based programs. Smart Start financially supports programs that increase the number of quality early childhood programs, provide education for early childhood workers, support parent education programs and connect families with medical services.

NCPC places great emphasis on local control, coupled with strict accountability, oversight and measures to ensure financial integrity.
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The earliest years of childhood are critical. Experiences during this time literally shape the structure of the brain. Because today’s children are tomorrow’s leaders, parents and workers, everyone has a stake in making sure all children have the experiences they need to thrive. Smart Start is the system that brings together all the people involved in a young child’s life—families, teachers, doctors, caregivers, social workers, and many others—to ensure every child has all they need for healthy growth and development. For more information, visit www.smartstart.org.

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New Glossary for ECE Professional Development Available

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

What do we mean when we use the terms mentoring or technical assistance? State early childhood administrators need to rely on consistent definitions and understandings of terminology as they seek to develop professional development systems. A new tool, the Early Childhood Education Professional Development: Training and Technical Assistance Glossary, provides national definitions for a host of professional develoment terms. It was developed by the NAEYC and the National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies.

Download the glossary.

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Nightly News Reports on Drop in ECE Funding

Wednesday, April 27th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

The Nightly News with Brian Williams calls attention to the drop in funding for early childhood education.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

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Report: 3rd Grade Reading Skills Predict High School Graduation

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

RALEIGH, N.C. – North Carolina children who struggle with reading in third grade are more likely to miss out on a high school diploma, according to a new study which followed thousands of students nationwide through their school years.

Those not reading at grade level are four times more likely not to graduate, the study found, and chances of failure are even higher for children living in poverty and minorities.

Report author Donald Hernandez, a senior advisor at the Foundation for Childhood Development, says reading skill must be addressed even before a child enters kindergarten.

“Research has found that high-quality early education makes a big difference in terms of third-grade reading scores and success through high school.”

In North Carolina, Smart Start helps thousands of children get a jump on reading skills through its early-childhood education programs, although some of its funding is in jeopardy as the state considers budget cuts.

Listen to the rest of the story at the Public News Service site.

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Survey Shows Protecting Children’s Programs in the Federal Budget is Voters’ Top Priority

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

A poll released today reveals strong public support for protecting federal investments that benefit children. In a battery of survey questions identifying a series of potential cuts that Congress may consider in the broader budget debate, the survey finds that voters are more likely to hold harmless programs affecting kids than any other programs on the chopping block.

Furthermore, results from the survey reveal cuts to programs affecting kids prove just as unpopular as cuts affecting seniors. In fact, voters are as likely to oppose reductions in Medicaid as in Medicare. Voters also are more concerned about protecting children’s programs than a variety of other federal programs, such as transportation funding for highway construction, national defense, and medical and scientific research.

“The American people are sending a message that is loud and clear: don’t cut kids,” said Bruce Lesley, President of First Focus, the bipartisan child advocacy organization that commissioned the survey. “Many recent spending proposals have sacrificed the needs of children in order to protect the interests of others. However, results from this survey prove that protecting programs that improve the well-being of children is immensely important to voters. We urge policymakers to heed the priorities of their constituents by holding children harmless as they work to find solutions to our nation’s budget challenges.”

Key findings from the survey include:

  • Voters believe children in America fare poorly. By a margin of 58-20 percent, or by almost a 3:1 margin, a majority of voters believe that the lives of children in America have gotten worse rather than better in the last ten years, including a quarter (26 percent) who believe children’s lives have gotten much worse.Republican voters are the most concerned, as they believe the lives of children are worse by a margin of 62-16 percent, an almost 4:1 margin.
  • Children’s programs are most important to voters relative to other potential program cuts. When provided a battery of potential cuts some have considered in the budget debate, voters clearly protect children. In fact, the least popular cuts all directly affect children, including cuts to federal child nutrition programs, Head Start, k-12 education, CHIP, among others. When asked whether the following programs should receive no reduction, a minor reduction, or a major reduction, American voters responded as follows (see Figure 1).
  • Voters strongly oppose the more than $750 billion in proposed cuts to Medicaid and funding shortfall created in the Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) included in the House Budget Committee proposal. By a 70-27 percent margin, the majority of American voters oppose the cuts to Medicaid and, by a 73-23 percent margin, Americans oppose the proposed cuts to CHIP (51 percent strongly oppose). This includes opposition to the Medicaid and CHIP cuts by margins of 66-30 percent and 67-26 percent, respectively, in Republican congressional districts. Voters also oppose, by a 2:1 margin, a plan to provide governors more flexibility if it meant eliminating insurance coverage for some children (31 percent favor, 63 percent oppose).
  • Cutting programs is not the only option. Voters support other options for reducing the deficit. A 72 percent majority describe eliminating loopholes and federal subsidies to corporations as acceptable, 63 percent accept eliminating the Bush tax cuts for families earning over $250,000 a year, and 64 percent oppose the Ryan plan to lower the top tax bracket by a third. Furthermore, when presented with a range of suggestions for dealing with the deficit, voters support raising taxes on those earning over $1 million a year rather than cutting important programs by a 72-21 percent margin.
  • When provided context, voters oppose the House Budget Committee proposal. Less than half of voters (45 percent) support a “proposed budget for the next 10 years that will cut 6.2 trillion from the federal budget deficit.” When provided a fuller and fair description of the details of the plan, support sinks, 37 percent favor, 56 percent oppose.

The telephone survey, completed during the period of April 13-18, 2011, was commissioned by First Focus and conducted by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research, using a national probability sample of 1,023 likely 2012 voters. In order to better reflect the changing lifestyle of the voting population, the survey also includes a sample of 114 cell phone interviews. The survey’s margin of error is +/- 3.10 points at 95 percent confidence interval.

Review a summary of the poll’s key findings
Read a press release about this poll

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Smart Start in Action

Monday, April 25th, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

 

Lucy Daniels Center and Smart Start from Together NC on Vimeo.

North Carolinians understand that the future of our state depends on ensuring that our young children birth to five have the early intervention and quality education to succeed in kindergarten and beyond.

That’s why our General Assembly created Smart Start, our nationally-recognized infrastructure for early childhood education.

Through 77 local partnerships that serve all 100 counties, Smart Start serves hundreds of thousands of children every year. Smart Start’s success has been verified repeatedly in more than 37 independent studies, including a recent Duke University study that showed that Smart Start increases third grade test scores and reduces the need for special education.

Investments in quality early child education pay off and Nobel-prize winning economist James Heckman has found that such investments yield higher returns than those in higher education or job training.

If you’re concerned about the fate of Smart Start and other public investments, visit http://www.speaknc.org/2011/04/lucy-daniels-center-and-smart-start/.org to learn more.

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Early Education: A Top Priority for Military Families

Thursday, April 21st, 2011 | Author: Smart Start

Securing quality early care and education programs for their young children is vital to military parents at home and when deployed.

Pre-K Now, in collaboration with other early childhood advocacy groups, commissioned a survey of military family members with children age five and younger, including Active Duty, National Guard and Reserve personnel or their spouses. The survey was designed to explore the needs and priorities military parents have for their children, the challenges they face in accessing services and the value they place on the programs currently available.

The study found that most military families, like their civilian peers, do not have access to high-quality early learning and care opportunities. This gap represents one of the most pressing needs for service members, their spouses and their young children.

This brief presents the key findings of the survey and details specific steps state and federal leaders can take to provide the high-quality early childhood programs that servicemen and women themselves identify as critical to their families’ stability at home and their focus and peace of mind on the job.

Download the full report (PDF).

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