News

February 19, 2025

Early Intervention Careers

News

February 18, 2025

Early Intervention Advocacy Resources

News

February 17, 2025

What to Do if Families Have Concerns About a Child’s EI Services

News

February 16, 2025

Tips for Creating an Inclusive ECE Environment

Below are tips, practices, and tools that support an inclusive and equitable learning environment for ALL children.

News

February 15, 2025

Behavior is Communication: Understanding the Basics of Behavior

Now what?

By noting patterns of a concerning behavior, you can start to work with your classroom team and EI providers to address environment, interactions, developmentally appropriate practices, etc.

Remember: You can’t control someone’s behavior. What you can control are environmental antecedents and your reaction (the consequence).

Additional Behavior Support Resources

News

February 14, 2025

The Role of ECE Programs in EI Services

Before EI Starts:

Talk to the parents/guardians about …

  • The child’s developmental milestones.
  • Observations of the child, highlighting both areas of strength and areas that need additional support.

Encourage the child’s family to talk to their pediatrician about any developmental concerns or reach out to Early Intervention for a no-cost developmental screening.

Have local EI resources available to all families in your program.

After EI Starts:

Share information about …

  • The child’s interests and preferences (toys, friends, games, songs, etc).
  • The child’s dislikes or non-preferred activities.
  • Your classroom schedule, transitions, and routines.

Partner with the EI providers:

  • Welcome EI into your classroom with the assumption that they want to make your day easier—not harder!
  • You likely aren’t able to spend the full session engaging with the EI provider and child. Try to take a few minutes to check in with the EI provider at the beginning and end of the session.
  • Intentionally observe the EI provider’s interactions with the child.
  • Be open to new suggestions and give yourself time to try new strategies. You may need to try a new strategy for a few weeks before you notice a difference.

Advocate for yourself and your classroom:

  • Ask the EI providers to write a few bullet points of practice strategies on a sticky note, or text you a quick summary of strategies.
  • If you find a strategy is too difficult to implement given your program’s policies and procedures, ask the EI provider to brainstorm ways to incorporate the strategy into routines and activities that you’re already doing.
  • Provide honest feedback to the EI provider as well as the parent.

News

February 13, 2025

Tips for ECE & EI Collaboration

News

February 12, 2025

What to Expect During an EI Visit in an Early Care and Education Program

News

February 11, 2025

All About IFSPs & IEPs

News

February 10, 2025

EI & ECE: Myths vs. Facts

Myths about Early Intervention

Myth: Early intervention can “cure” a child’s delays or disability.

Fact:

Early Intervention aims to build parent and caregiver capacity in supporting a child’s unique developmental needs. EI is designed to be a collaborative process that provides tools, resources, strategies, and coaching to parents and caregivers.

 

Myth: EI providers should be working directly with the child one-on-one during their full session. They should not be talking to the teacher or completing paperwork during the session.

Fact:

EI providers should balance between modeling strategies, engaging with the child, and coaching the caregiver. EI providers may also be required to collect data, document progress, and complete session notes during the session to promote caregiver involvement in these aspects of EI.

 

Myth: EI sessions don’t feel long enough or frequent enough for change to happen.

Fact:

When EI is provided in the home or at child care, sessions are typically up to 60 minutes in length. Sessions use a coaching model of service delivery to support parent/caregiver carryover, consistency, and repeated practice outside of the EI session—all of which help young children learn. Children who benefit from more intensive supports may qualify for a dedicated preschool EI classroom. Families can talk to their preschool EI team or local Intermediate Unit for more information.

 

Myth: If a child has EI, they’ll automatically be in special education for the rest of their schooling.

Fact:

A child who receives EI may stop receiving services at any time if the parent/guardian chooses to do so. Children receiving EI are also regularly reevaluated and may stop receiving services when they meet developmental milestones. Research suggests that EI can actually be linked to a lower need for special education support in the future.

 

Myth: Child care is the same as babysitting.

Fact:

There are many differences between licensed child care and babysitting. Babysitting is typically a private arrangement made between a parent and a caregiver. Licensed child care is regulated by the Department of Human Services, Regional Child Development Office. In child care programs, there are regulations in place to protect the health and safety of young children. There are also quality standards guided by Keystone STARS. Many child care programs follow a curriculum aligned with PA Early Learning Standards to promote positive interactions, developmentally appropriate practice, and social-emotional development.

 

Myth: Most child care providers and early educators do not have child development training, credentials, or degrees.

Fact:

The minimum required education for a teacher’s assistant or aide in a licensed child care program in PA is a high school diploma plus 15 hours of new staff orientation training. Assistant Group Supervisors must have a high school diploma with credit hours in an early childhood related field or two years of experience with children. Lead teachers or group supervisors must have a minimum of an Associate’s Degree in ECE or related field plus two years of experience with children, but many have a bachelor’s degree or higher. Pre-K Counts teachers are required to have a PA teaching certification. Learn more about ECE Career Lattice (PDF).

 

Myth: Child care providers and early childhood educators should be able to provide one-on-one support to children who need it.

Fact:

Child care is a group care setting. While child care teachers provide some individualized attention throughout the day, they are responsible for the safety and education of the full group. Child Care providers in PA are required by PA code to maintain the following student-to-staff ratios:

  • Infants (birth–12 months): 1 adult to 4 infants
  • Young Toddler (1–2 years old): 1 adult to 5 young toddlers
  • Older Toddler (2–3 years old): 1 adult to 6 older toddlers
  • Preschool (3 years old–beginning K): 1 adult to 10 preschoolers

 

Myth: It doesn’t matter if you call it “child care” or “day care.”

Fact:

Words matter! In June of 2018, the Pennsylvania state legislature passed House Bill 1677 to update Pennsylvania’s regulations and code to use the term “child care,” rather than “day care,” to reflect the work of early learning programs more accurately. The impacts of child care are multifaceted and lifelong—much longer than a day. Learn more about why it’s important to Call it Child Care.

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