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National Center on Child Care Quality Improvement QRIS Standards Learning Table Session #4: Efficiency: Streamlining QRIS using your State Knowledge and Data-based Experience

QRIS Standards Learning Table

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QRIS Standards Learning Table. Session #4: Efficiency: Streamlining QRIS using your State Knowledge and Data-based Experience. Introductions and Updates. Introduce the state team (Name, title, agency) AR DE KY MS NH NM OK TX - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: QRIS Standards Learning Table

National Center on Child Care Quality Improvement

QRIS Standards Learning Table

Session #4: Efficiency: Streamlining QRIS using your State Knowledge and

Data-based Experience

Page 2: QRIS Standards Learning Table

2

Introductions and Updates• Introduce the state team (Name, title, agency)

AR DE KY MS NH NM OK TX • Update us on what your state team has been

doing on revising your QRIS since our last call.

• If a certain resource or idea has been particularly helpful, tell us about that.

Page 3: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Homework Discussion

• What have you revised and why?• What data did you use?

Page 4: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Overview

• Data systems and standards• Using data for decision-making in QRIS design

and revision• Kentucky experience using data• NAEYC experience using data• Data efforts (national)

Page 5: QRIS Standards Learning Table

QRIS Data Systems Support Implementation

• Online application (provider portals for uploading documents, connecting to relevant resources)

• Data import from other systems (regulation, registry, onsite assessment reports, etc.)

• Calculating ratings• Supporting the QI/TA functions• …Data!

Page 6: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Use Data to Eliminate Criteria

• If your state data show that all or most providers meet a criterion (no variation by level), consider dropping it.

• Or move the criterion to Level 1.• Or if it’s an essential element defining quality,

keep it, but don’t use it to determine ratings.

Page 7: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Use Data to Move/Revise Criteria

• Suppose your state data show that very few or no providers meet a criterion.

• If it’s not an essential element of quality, consider dropping it completely.

• If it is an essential element of quality, consider– moving the criterion to the top Level or – moving it into the CQI section of your QRIS – focusing TA and PD on improvement on it, and not

including it in ratings until practice has advanced.

Page 8: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Use Data to Find ‘Predictor’ Criteria

• With research partners, explore the relationships among criteria.

• Is there a set of items that consistently are met?

• It is possible to determine statistically if one of them is a “predictor” (if it’s met, very highly likely that the others are also met)

Page 9: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Use Data to Revise QRIS

• Suppose the data shows that programs in your state QRIS are meeting many criteria (but not all) in the block above where they are now. .

• Use criteria level data from the programs currently participating in QRIS to model how programs might score in alternative rating structures – points or hybrid

• KY has done that!

Page 10: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Presented with permission from Child Trends (2012)

Page 11: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Presented with permission from Child Trends (2012)

Page 12: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Presented with permission from Child Trends (2012)

Page 13: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Presented with permission from Child Trends (2012)

Page 14: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Presented with permission from Child Trends (2012)

Page 15: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Presented with permission from Child Trends (2012)

Page 16: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Presented with permission from Child Trends (2012)

Page 17: QRIS Standards Learning Table

NAEYC Accreditation Reliability and Validity Study

Findings of note in re QRIS and accreditation• Validity: Meaningful and significant differences in the percent

of criteria met in several standards (Teaching, Relationships, Assessment of Child Progress) between programs that achieve accreditation and those that do not.

• Content: Strong positive relationship between meeting lead teacher qualifications and meeting higher proportion of criteria in Relationships;

• Content: On overall diversity and cultural competence criteria, significant difference between programs that achieve accreditation (91% met) and those that do not (77% met)

Page 18: QRIS Standards Learning Table

NAEYC Accreditation as a Mark of Program Quality

Kyle Snow, Ph.D.

Senior Scholar and DirectorCenter for Applied Research

National Association for the Education of Young Children

Research Policy Practice

Page 19: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Goals

1. Overview of NAEYC Accreditation 2. What do we know about Accreditation3. NAEYC Accreditation & QRIS Congruence

Page 20: QRIS Standards Learning Table

About NAEYC Accreditation•NAEYC Accreditation is a meaningful tool for program quality improvement for programs serving children birth through kindergarten.

•Developed in the early 1980s

•A comprehensive system review and reinvention was fully implemented in fall 2006.

•In 2010 an independent review of the site visit and decision protocols was completed validating these processes.

Page 21: QRIS Standards Learning Table

A Portrait of Accredited Programs

• Program Affiliations:– College/University 5.6%– Employer-Sponsored 7.1% – Faith-based Institution 9.5%– Head Start 31.7% – Hospital 2.4% – Migrant services 1.6%– Military Installation 2.4%– Public School 19.8% – US Government Facility 3.2% – Parent Cooperative 11.1% – Indian Tribe .8% – Alaskan Native Village .8%

• Corporate Structure: – Non Profit 60.3%– Public Agency 19.0%– For Profit 19.0%– Not stated 2 1.6%

• Special Populations:– None 47.6% – Migrant workers 4.8% – Teen parents 23% – Homeless families 17.5%– Other: 19.0% (incl. 13.5% low

income)

As of 11/24/12, there are 6,748 accredited programs serving 592,675 children

Page 22: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Quality

Improvem

ent

About NAEYC Accreditation

Meet and Maintain Standards

Becoming a Candidate

Becoming an Applicant

Enrollment in Self-Study1

2

3

4

4-Step Process

Site Visit

Self-Assessment

Page 23: QRIS Standards Learning Table

NAEYC Program Standards and Criteria

NAEYC Program Standards 1 – Relationships

2 – Curriculum

3 – Teaching

4 – Assessment of Child Progress

5 – Health

6 – Teachers

7 – Families

8 – Community Relationships

9 – Physical Environment

10 – Leadership and Management

• Standard– Topic• Criteria–Indicator(s)

Sources of Evidence

Page 24: QRIS Standards Learning Table

NAEYC Program Standards and Criteria

Possible Outcomes:– Accredited– Deferred– Denied

To be accredited:– 80% of all assessed criteria in each standard– 70% on all criteria assessed in each group– All Required Criteria

Page 25: QRIS Standards Learning Table

NAEYC Accreditation - Recap• Programs strive to meet NAEYC program standards• Programs self-assess• Assess programs against 10 standards that are research based• Performance based upon multiple indicators and multiple

sources of evidence• Process allows for self-assessment and NAEYC performance

feedback• Process includes quality indicator and improvement systems• But – does it really define quality, can programs attain it, can

they maintain it, and can it be monitored?

Page 26: QRIS Standards Learning Table

What do we know about Accreditation?• Reinvention and Criteria validation

– During field tests for reinvention, NAEYC (2005) reported significant correlations between criteria (at the standard level) and Early Childhood Environment Rating Scale (ECERS) scores among 70 early childhood programs. The strongest relationships were found between overall quality and program standards for relationships, curriculum, and teaching.

• Validation studies– Sachs and Weiland (2010): schools engaged in accreditation scored higher on

subscales of the ECERS-R, and children had higher scores on the Peabody Picture –Vocabulary Test (PPVT-III) compared to peers in programs not accredited (even after controlling for initial PPVT scores).

• State-level data within QRIS systems– PA Keystone STARS program (OCDEL, 2010) showed significant correlations between

accreditation and environmental ratings of program quality (ECERS, ITERS, SACERS)

Page 27: QRIS Standards Learning Table

What do we know about Accreditation?• Trend Briefs (http://www.naeyc.org/academy/primary/trendbriefs)

– communications intended to share data on programs seeking accreditation and to connect the findings to early childhood research trends.

– Releases to date:• Teaching: Accreditation of Programs for Young Children Standard 3• Assessment of Child Progress: Accreditation of Programs for Young

Children Standard 4• Relationships: Accreditation of Programs for Young Children Standard 1• Supporting Cultural Competence: Accreditation of Programs for Young

Children Cross-Cutting Theme in Program Standards– Upcoming:

• Family Engagement: Accreditation of Programs for Young Children Cross-Cutting Theme in Program Standards

Page 28: QRIS Standards Learning Table

What do we know about Accreditation?

• Trend Briefs: Data source: – Sample included 130

programs receiving accreditation site visits between September 2009 and July 2010.

– Data captured on all 417 NAEYC criteria

– Comparisons between accredited and not accredited programs’ performance on all criteria Accredit Programs Defer or Deny Programs

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

90%

31%

10%

69%

Criterion3.G.03 Met/Not Met Rates for Accredited vs. Not-Accredited Programs

Fail Pass

Page 29: QRIS Standards Learning Table

What do we know about Accreditation?• Trend Briefs - Selected findings:– Relationships (NAEYC Standard 1)

• Differences are noted in terms of programs’ means of dealing with challenging behavior, but even more so in the degree to which programs provide a “predictable, consistent, and harmonious” classroom.

– Teaching (NAEYC Standard 3)• Programs differ primarily among criteria that assess the use of scaffolding

strategies in the classroom. – Assessment of Child Progress (NAEYC Standard 4)

• Programs accredited by NAEYC demonstrate a planned, intentional use of child assessment and communication of assessment results: using assessments to improve instruction and program design, and to effectively communicate assessment results to other teachers and families.

Page 30: QRIS Standards Learning Table

What do we know about Accreditation?• Trend Briefs - Selected findings:– Supporting Cultural Competence (Cross-Standard)

• Many of the same criteria that prove the most challenging overall also differentiate between programs that became accredited and those that did not.

• Differences in how programs can connect with diverse families and engage them in the child’s program

• Differences in programs’ ability to understand, and respect, diversity in family values, especially when they may differ from those of the teacher.

• Differences in hiring diverse staff and ensuring staff receive training that includes working with diverse families.

• Differences in providing children with varied and deep experiences to support their own cultural competence.

Page 31: QRIS Standards Learning Table

What do we know about Accreditation?

• Some data to suggest valid indicator of quality– Need more validation studies and data

• Analysis of Accreditation data show differentiation between programs accredited and those not accredited, even when all attempt to reach same criteria– Future analyses can identify performance clusters, possible

examine program performance pre-self-study to site visit to examine potential for quality improvement processes

Page 32: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Accreditation and QRIS Congruence

• State recognition of accreditation within QRIS ratings• Some states use NAEYC Standards for specific areas– Alignment of program standards– Streamlining for programs that meet accreditation standards

• Accreditation Facilitation (Program Quality Improvement) Project models

Page 33: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Accreditation and QRIS Congruence

• State QRIS systems include accreditation in various ways:– Not recognized– Awarding additional points towards rating (overall or in

specific areas, varying by system)– Enter at top (or near-top) rating

• Some combine accreditation with ERS visits• Some differentiate accrediting bodies

Page 34: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Accreditation and QRIS Congruence

In what ways can states benefit from NAEYC experience through accreditation in designing and implementing

QRIS systems for program quality recognition and improvement, and in communicating with families?

Page 35: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Data Can Facilitate Cross-State Sharing and Comparison

• What data elements does your system need?• Are there common definitions of data

elements? • National data efforts to be aware of…

Page 36: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Common Education Data Standards

• Early Learning is one domain in the overall P-20 data model

• https://ceds.ed.gov/Default.aspx

Page 37: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Quality Initiatives Research and Evaluation Consortium (INQUIRE)

• INQUIRE supports high quality, policy-relevant research and evaluation on quality rating and improvement systems (QRIS) and other quality initiatives by providing a learning community and resources to support researchers.

• The INQUIRE Consortium also provides input and information to state administrators and other policymakers and practitioners on evaluation strategies, new research, interpretation of research results, and implications of new research for practice.

• Child Trends helps to facilitate INQUIRE activities

Page 38: QRIS Standards Learning Table

INQUIRE and Data

QRIS/QI Data Elements workgroup of INQUIRE• worked with US Department of Education group

focusing on Common Education Data Standards (CEDS) to create a recommended list of data elements, which is out now for public comment.

• developing a list of recommended data elements for QRIS and Quality Improvement purposes

• will be developing a set of data elements, especially for child care state administrators and CCDF reporting

Page 39: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Questions, Reflections, Comments?

Page 40: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Homework for January 3, 2013

Effective Cross-Sector QRIS: Challenges and Opportunities

Cross-sector QRIS means one that aims for participation by most group early care and education providers, regardless of funding stream or auspice. At a minimum, this includes child care centers and family child care homes, Pre-K and Head Start, i.e., all publically supported and licensed settings, but not informal caregivers.

A survey monkey link will be emailed to you for use in completing the homework questions. – Due December 14th (for 1.3.13 webinar)

Page 41: QRIS Standards Learning Table

Homework Questions• What challenges have you experienced in your efforts to develop and/or

implement a cross-sector QRIS? • What successes have you had with cross-sector QRIS?• How do license-exempt centers (e.g. preK programs located in public or

private schools) participate in your QRIS? Have you created an 'equivalent' standard for licensing?

• What have you learned about strategies for effectively engaging the support systems of other sectors (e.g. the Head Start T/TA system or early intervention training) in QRIS supports?

• Have you tried to engage monitoring or accountability systems from other sectors (such as collaborating with Head Start or PreK monitoring)?

• Have you worked with systems like early intervention, child welfare, and others to ensure that they understand QRIS and prioritize child placements in higher-quality settings?