Thursday, May 24, 2012

Issues and Trends

National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies

Great News!
This past month has been encompassed with a large hill to climb. As I mentioned before many centers across the state of Illinois were at risk of closing due to the state budget shortfalls. Centers across the state have gone without being paid for services rendered in the month of April. This also took place on last summer which took place for two months. Centers are care providers are still trying to recover from last year. We have almost reached the top. On May 21, 2012 I received a letter from Child Care Resource and Referral that Senate Bill (formerly HB164) has passed both the House and the Senate and has been signed by Governor Quinn. This will allow providers to receive funding for families that they provider care for participating in the Child Care Assistance Program through the end of Fiscal year 2012. Please continue to  keep those center across the states in your  thoughts as many  are still faced with  losing  funding  as funding for child care and  early  education is potentially  going to be  cut  for the FY2013.
I just wanted to share this with you all. It is a true sign that our advocating and supporting our future leaders of America is valuable. Let‘s keep fighting together to save the educations of our children.
Now back to work.  For over the past year the NACCRRA has been posting articles about the  budget crisis across the country. There is a section under Program and Services that discusses early childhood focus. This section provides data and news articles about trends in child care across the country. Looking  at  some  of the articles I  realize that we as a country are  in big  trouble  if  we  don’t  solve our  budget  issues. Another thought I had was I can see how hard it  can be  for our  govemnent leaders knowing that funding has to be appropriated to  support the entire country especially  with  the unemployment  rating being  so high. This means that additional funding must be made available in these areas as well. There is just not enough funding to support it all. We just have to keep pushing for more from our politicians.
I also wanted to  share this with  those who are looking  for additional trainings in child care.
Trainings are available for professionals to professionals 24 hours a day 365 days a year so there is no need to wait. Trainings are designed to assist professional’s complete annual requirements, CDA certifications, CDA renewal or in-service training.  
There are several topics available. If interested go to the NCRAA home page, from here select  Program and Services, select ChildCare Aware Training. At the bottom of the page select the http://naccrra.smarthorizons.org/ . Then select Child Care provider, this will take you to a list of trainings.  Make sure to input your local zip code to access the training curriculum. I’ve tried other ways to navigate to get here but they did not work.
There are series of trainings, Center Based, Family  Child Care, General Training, Webinars &Blended Learning, Business Education and Spanish Courses, so many to choose from. I found many of great interest. One  that is available is operating standards for High Quality Inclusive Child Care. It consists of operating standards for high quality inclusive child care that will strengthen directors’ ability to reach and include children with disabilities.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Getting to Know Your International Contacts

Getting to Know Your International Contacts—Part 1


Initially I was contacted by Cheryl Anderson stating that she would love to help me. Cheryl is the Director of a not-for profit community based Child Care Centre in Gray, which is the Northern Territory of Australia.
At this time I have not received a reply to any additional communications. Understanding that being in a very demanding position, priorities are important and it is possible that she has not had the time to respond.

I have moved forward with researching the area in which she services with hopes of hearing from here soon. If no word from my professional contact by Monday of next week I will move on to option B.

A poverty report completed by (ACOSS) Australia Council of Social Services, which was last published in October 2010 shows that approximately 2.2 million people, or 11% of Australians lived in poverty in 2006 – the latest date for which statistics are available compared with 10% in 2004 and 8% in 1994.

Australian children over 500,000 – in 2006 lived in households with equivalent income less than 50 percent of the median.

Some additional information that I located was the life expectancy of children. Australia is divided by Indigenous and Non Indigenous. Approximately 83 percent of Indigenous deaths below age 5 occur within the first year of life and, of these, nearly half occur within the first month. Infant mortality for Indigenous infants in the 2002‑06 period was 12.3 deaths per 1000 live births, compared with 4.2 deaths for non‑Indigenous infants (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2008).

Indigenous children currently experience much poorer outcomes than non-Indigenous children, with high levels of disadvantage in early childhood associated with poorer outcomes in health and education.

I found this information about Australia to be very interesting. It has broadened my understanding of the affects that poverty has on other parts of the world.



Reference


http://www.facs.gov.au/sa/indigenous/pubs/general/Documents/closing_the_gap/p2.htm

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Sharing Web Resources

The organization that I have chosen is National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies. The NACCRRA promotes national policies and partnerships to advance development and learning of all children. The organization also provides vision, leadership, and supports their local communities ‘network of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies. There website is http://www.naccrra.org/
The organizations website offers a wealth of valuable information. A few areas are programs and services, about child care, public policy, and child care news.
This week I took the time to navigate throughout the site. While doing so I found many great tools. Keeping a focus on this week’s discussion I chose to focus more on the subcategories child demographics and poverty.
A fact sheet, Who’s Minding The Kids? Child Care Arrangements takes a look at recent information from the 2011, U.S. Census Bureau. The fact sheet takes a look at the need for child care according to a parents work schedule.
According to the report of the 20 million children younger than age 5 living with their mothers, 11 million have working mom. Almost one-third, 33.3 million children are living with mothers working non-traditional hours. 1.7 million children live below the poverty level even though their mothers are working. Children under age 6 living in single mother-headed households were about four times as likely as their peers in married-couple households to be living in poverty in 2010:58.2 percent of young children of single mothers versus 13.4 percent of young children in married-couple households. The number of young children under 6 in poverty increased from 6.0 million in 2009 to 6.3 million in 2010.
According to the Census report, in 2010, the number of children living in families in deep poverty (with income below 50percent of their poverty threshold) rose by half a million children. 7.4 million children, or 9.9 percent, lived in families with income below 50 percent of their poverty threshold, up from 9.3 percent and 6.9 million in 2009.
Reading these reports I could not help but reflect on how families receiving child care assistance have been affected by a shortage in their states funding. Many parents barely bringing in any income will soon be faced with higher out of pocket child care expenses. Many families are considering quitting their jobs to stay at home and care for their children. With these actions pushing those already below the poverty level lower than they were before. Within the next few weeks I hope to continue advocating for those families who are risk of losing their child care subsidies and at risk of being without jobs. I could go even further in detail as how they may also be face with putting their children in care that do not meet quality standards.

Reference
http://www.naccrra.org/about-child-care/poverty, retrieved May 8, 2012

Saturday, May 5, 2012

Establishing Professional Contacts and Expanding Resources

This week I found it very difficult to come in contact with a professional that I could communicate with in regards to their perspectives on early childhood in their county. I sent numerous emails and attempted several phones calls only to be looped back to the automated system or not receive a response. I hope to continue in these efforts with at least two more attempts. I have also spoke with a few coworkers with hopes that  they would have a  professional connection for me.

The website that  I will be viewing  for the next  8 weeks, is http://www.naccrra.org/. The NACCRRA provides a wealth of information  for not  only parents, but child care  providers as well. I am so excited to  have an opportunity to share with others the several components of the website.