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Right From The Start Succeeding in the first 1000 days
PAY ATTENTION TO THE WHOLE CHILD
Why, despite our best efforts, do we still have children in Connecticut entering school behind their peers, not fully ready to learn and succeed?
Right from the Start (RFTS) is a Connecticut initiative that evolved from the outcry of parents, early care providers, advocates and a range of community stakeholders for a coordinated comprehensive early care and education delivery system.
We want a system where all Connecticut children receive the early education and development support they need.
Right From The Start Vision and Purpose
Right From The Start conversations are bringing together people in communities throughout Connecticut to identify the best approaches to address four root causes that are not receiving enough attention.
We want a system :• that builds a foundation for learning and development during
a child’s first 1000 days – Early is Good, Earlier is Better
• with accessible health, mental health, and social-emotional development support – Pay Attention to the Whole Child
• provides all children regardless of race or economic background with the same opportunities – Mind the Opportunity Gaps
• where local communities are empowered to make effective decisions for their citizens – Support Local Community Action
Video Preview: Important ideas and themes:
Whole Child Domains – cognitive learning, disabilities,
literacy, art Relationships Exploring and discovery Traumatic loss and grief Risk factors
Today’s Topic: Pay Attention to the Whole Child
What would you tell your friends who asked you about this video?
Pay Attention to the Whole Child
SHOW VIDEO(INSERT STILL SHOT/LINK TO VIDEO)
Pay Attention to the Whole Child
What important ideas did you hear in this video?
about what children need?about parents and families?about child care providers?about health care provides?about other services?
Why is this important to you?
Pay Attention to the Whole Child
In our state, we cannot continue to “divide the child” into separate pieces to receive services.
How can our communities ensure that services are well connected?
How can the system work better to address the needs of the whole child?
Three approaches suggest alternative ways to improve.
Reaching Right From the Start Goals
Opportunities and Solutions
Approach A Make information easy to find to ensure families know about and understand the available services. Informed parents are empowered to be active partners with caregivers and service providers in their nurturing their child’s early development.
“Parents know their children best and need information to make decisions and find the right services.”
Reaching Right From the Start Goals
Opportunities and Solutions
Approach B:
Provide every child with a medical home to identify needs early and coordinate services. Health, education and family support providers must make collaboration the norm and develop technologies and operating practices required to share information and collect data. “Different services and providers need to talk to each other and work together to meet ALL the needs of young children and families.”
Reaching Right From the Start Goals
Opportunities and Solutions
Approach C: Public policy and state services must address root causes of poverty, early risk factors and community conditions that predict school failure, future incarceration, depression and violence.
“Persistent poverty and isolation leave too many children without resources to meet their basic needs.”
Reaching Right From the Start Goals
Opportunities and Solutions
WHICH IS OUR BEST OPTION FOR
BUILDING A SYSTEM THAT MEETS THE
NEEDS OF THE WHOLE CHILD?
CONSIDERING EACH APPROACH
Approach A: Make information easy to find to ensure families know about and understand the available services. Informed parents are empowered to be active partners with caregivers and service providers in their nurturing their child’s early development.
What are the advantages of this approach?… the disadvantages of this approach?
Building a system that works for the Whole Child
Approach B: Provide every child with a medical home to identify needs early and coordinate services. Health, education and family support providers must make collaboration the norm and develop technologies and operating practices required to share information and collect data.
What are the advantages of this approach?… the disadvantages of this approach?
Building a system that works for the Whole Child
Approach C: Make early care and education a public policy priority. Policy makers are responsible for how well the system works, for allocating funding and deciding how families and children are served.
What are the advantages of this approach?… the disadvantages of this approach?
Building a system that works for the Whole Child
If you could choose only one of these approaches which would you choose?
Why?
What works best?
What was the most important idea you heard today?
What do you like about that idea?
Why is that important?
Our best ideas
What did you learn or hear about today that you would like to know more about?
Is there anything that you, individually, might do or do differently, as a result of today’s conversation?
What would you like to see happen to follow up on today’s conversation?
Where do we go from here?
(ADD THE LOCAL PLAN OF ACTION AND OPTIONS FOR COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION)
Options for Taking Action
Options forTaking ActionWe invite you to join our growing
network. Go to our website: [email protected]
◦ Share your thoughts, feelings, and insights in the Your Voice section.
◦ Connect with others in53 Discovery communities working collaboratively to improve early childhood.
◦ Learn more in our Resource section.