News

June 14, 2023

How Family Engagement Supports Kindergarten Readiness & Early School Success

Family engagement is a critical driver in ensuring that all children enter kindergarten “ready to learn” and experience early school success. According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, kindergarten readiness can impact how successful a child is in high school and beyond, leading to better grades and lower dropout rates, as well as better health and lifestyle habits. Children who enter school with key readiness skills have an 82 percent chance of mastering basic skills by age 11, compared with 45 percent for young children who are not “kindergarten ready.” Yet, many children nationwide are still unable to reach this pivotal benchmark.

Join the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) at this webinar to hear from education leaders and practitioners who will share the latest research and on-the-ground lessons for how family engagement has improved kindergarten readiness and early school success in their states, districts, and communities.

Moderated by Yolie Flores, President and CEO of Families In Schools, this panel conversation will explore:

  • Why engaging families early matters for children’s long-term success
  • How innovative technologies can be leveraged to support families
  • The role that curriculum, professional development, and supplemental resources play in family engagement

Session Details

Tuesday, June 27 | 1 – 2:30 p.m.

Virtual

Register

Learn More

This webinar is the fifth in a series of conversations designed to boost family engagement practices between school and home. The six-month series, produced by the U.S. Department of Education in partnership with Carnegie Corporation of New York and Overdeck Family Foundation, will explore bright spots in the field and provide education leaders and practitioners with resources and evidence-based strategies to support student success.

Featured panelists include:

  • David Cintron, Superintendent, District 14, NYC Department of Education, New York, NY
  • Rebecca Crouse Kelley, J.D., Executive Vice President of Advocacy, Waterford.org
  • Shawn Foster, Ed.D., Superintendent, Orangeburg County School District, Orangeburg, SC
  • Kai-ama Hamer, Director, ParentCorps
  • Priscilla Hopkins, Executive Director, Denver Public Schools, Denver, CO
  • Deborah Leong, Ph.D., Co-founder and President, Tools of the Mind

To learn more, visit the event page on Eventbrite.

News

June 7, 2023

Organizations Publish New Education and Equity Resources for Families and Educators

The U.S. Departments of Education and Justice and the Erikson Institute have recently published new education and equity resources for parents, caregivers, teachers, policy makers, and child care providers.

Find a list of these resources below.

Recently Published Resources on Education & Equity

Resource on Confronting Racial Discrimination in Student Discipline – U.S. Departments of Education and Justice

About

The U.S. Departments of Education and Justice share with educators around the country the goal that all students attend schools where they are supported, safe, and able to access an excellent education. A school environment that is free from discrimination is essential to meeting that goal. However, decades of enforcement activity have demonstrated that discrimination based on race, color, and national origin in student discipline was, and continues to be, a significant concern.

Discrimination in student discipline forecloses opportunities for students, pushing them out of the classroom and diverting them from a path to success in school and beyond. Significant disparities by race—beginning as early as preschool—have persisted in the application of student discipline in schools.

The U.S. Departments of Education and Justice created this resource to to support schools’ efforts to confront the issue of race discrimination in student discipline effectively.

Content

In it, the authors:

  • provide examples of the Departments’ investigations of discrimination over the last 10 years;
  • describe how the Departments resolved investigations of 14 school districts in 10 states;
  • discuss concerns of discrimination in schools’ use of:
    • out-of-school suspensions
    • expulsions
    • school-based arrests
    • referrals to law enforcement
    • involuntary discipline transfers
    • informal removals
    • and other discipline against Black, Latino, and/or Native American students;
  • demonstrate the Departments’ ongoing commitment to the enforcement of laws that protect students from discrimination on the basis of race, color, or national origin in student discipline;
  • and demonstrate ways school districts can take steps to proactively improve their administration of student discipline

Access this resource or learn more about it on the U.S. Department of Education website.

Pre-K in Family Child Care Project: Strategies Toward the Equitable Implementation of Pre-K in Family Child Care – The Erikson Institute

About

The Pre-K in Family Child Care (PKFCC) Project explores strategies, successes, and challenges in the implementation of public pre-kindergarten (pre-k) in family child care (FCC) settings across states and locals in the U.S. through an equity lens.

This brief presents key findings about how pre-k systems address curriculum, assessment, developmental screening, and monitoring requirements to ensure FCC settings are equitably included in pre-k delivery.

Findings are based on data collected through focus groups in November 2022. These groups included 14 state and local pre-k administrators representing seven states and three cities or locals.

Content

Highlights from the report include:

  • Many pre-k systems that include FCC require educators to use designated curriculum, assessment, and/or screening tools and to
    participate in monitoring.

    • Some pre-k systems allow FCC educators to select a curriculum, assessment, or screening tool from the same approved lists offered to center-based preschools.
    • Pre-k systems generally do not offer FCC-specific curriculum options that address mixed-age groups or are culturally representative.
  • Few pre-k systems differentiate requirements for FCC educators or intentionally include FCC educators’ voices and perspectives in decision making.
    • Approved or vetted tools are often not available in providers’ or children’s home languages. Additionally, they do not often represent the culture of the FCC educators and children they serve.
    • Requirements for FCC educators implementing pre-k are often the same as center-based pre-k settings.
  • Pre-k systems invested in including FCCs offer individualized supports to meet curriculum, assessment, developmental screening, and monitoring requirements.
    • Coaching and professional development are provided through some pre-k systems to support FCC implementation of curriculum and assessment standards and requirements.
    • Fiscal supports are provided in some pre-k systems to offset the costs of curriculum, assessment, and developmental screening requirements. However, more supports are offered for curriculum implementation than for assessments and developmental screening.

Access this resource or learn more on the Erikson Institute website.

Learn More

To learn more, visit the U.S. Department of Education and Erikson Institute websites.

News

December 8, 2021

Webinar – COVID-19 Vaccines for School-Aged Children: What Parents and Families Should Know

Join NAFSCE and the U.S. Department of Education on December 9 at 8:00pm, ET for an informational webinar following the official approval of the Pfizer-BioNTech age 5-11 vaccine. Registration for this virtual event is available online.

During the webinar, panelists including United States Deputy Secretary of Education Cindy Marten, along with representatives from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the American Academy of Pediatrics, will join NAFSCE Executive Director, Vito Borrello for a series of presentations and constructive conversation to support parents and families as they consider the COVID-19 vaccine for their child(ren). Parents and caregivers can learn more about the following questions:

  • How was the vaccine developed?
  • How many children participated in the study for approval?
  • Will my child(ren) be safe taking the vaccine?
  • What are the side effects?
  • Should my child(ren) get the vaccine?
  • Where can I take my child to get the vaccine?

Parents are invited to submit questions about the vaccine on the registration form. Pre-submitted questions will help plan the content of the session. Time will also be reserved for live questions and answers at the end of the event.