Attachment A. TOC for Study of EHS-CCP

Attachment A. TOC for Study of EHS-CCP.pdf

Study of Early Head Start–Child Care Partnerships

Attachment A. TOC for Study of EHS-CCP

OMB: 0970-0471

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Theory of Change for the
Study of EHS-Child Care Partnerships

Partnership
Grantees

Child Care
Partners

A
ct

s

ut
Inp

tie

s

iv i

Early Head Start-child
care partnerships provide
coordinated, high
quality, comprehensive
services to low-income
infants and toddlers and
their families

Outcomes
Systems
Partners

Families

Partnership Programs:
Partnership Development

Partnership Grantees

•	Partnership grantees actively recruit partners and
child care providers express interest in partnering
Partners jointly:
•	Discuss and clarify partnership expectations
•	Develop partnership agreements (contract, MOU),
including funding arrangements

•	Partnership grantee type and prior service
delivery experience
•	Program size
•	Motivation to partner and readiness to change
•	Attitudes toward and experience with
collaboration
•	Knowledge and linkages to community
child care providers
•	Qualified staff to provide QI support
to child care providers

Partnership Programs:
Partnership Operation

•	Child care partner type (family child care
or center), size, and regulatory status
•	Hours of operation
•	Age range of children served; ability to
care for sibling groups
•	Child care partner experience and staff
credentials
•	Motivation to partner and readiness to change
•	Attitudes toward and experience with
collaboration
•	Openness to complying with the HSPPS
•	Participation in QRIS or other QI initiatives

Families

•	Socioeconomic and demographic
characteristics
•	Child care needs and preferences
(family configuration, work schedules,
transportation, culture, language)
•	Motivation to participate in partnership
programs
•	Eligibility for EHS and CCDF subsidies

Systems Partners

AC T I V I T I E S

INPUTS

Child Care Partners

Partners jointly:
•	Assess strengths and needs of each partner
•	Develop QI plans to achieve HSPPS compliance
•	Seek other QI opportunities
•	Monitor implementation of QI plans and
HSPPS compliance
•	Facilitate networking among infant-toddler
service providers
•	Assess partnership quality
•	Regular communication to ensure continuity
of care and smooth transitions for children
•	Recruit and enroll families
•	Implement family partnership agreements; provide
families with comprehensive services and referrals
•	Provide flexible, high-quality child care that meets
families’ needs
•	Facilitate continuity of care and transitions
between settings
•	Provide direct QI support and supplemental
materials
•	Provide training and support to staff working
in the partnership

Families
•	Enroll in EHS and child care subsidy program
•	Communicate child care needs and preferences
and select child care arrangements
•	Develop and implement family partnership
agreements
•	Maintain communication with partnership
programs for continuity of care and smooth
transitions for children

(National, State, Local)

•	Policies, regulations, and standards (HSPPS,
child care licensing, QRIS, other state initiatives)
•	Funding (EHS grant funds, CCDF subsidies,
other sources)
•	QI supports (Head Start and OCC T/TA,
QRIS, CCDF quality set aside, accreditation,
other initiatives)
•	Professional development (community
colleges and other institutions of higher
education)
CCDF=Child Care & Development Fund
EHS=Early Head Start
HSPPS=Head Start Program Performance Standards

Systems Partners
(National, State, Local)

•	Identify rule misalignment challenges and consider
rule accommodations to support partnerships
•	Coordinate with partners to provide QI and
professional development

MOU=Memorandum of Understanding
OCC=Office of Child Care
QI=Quality Improvement

QRIS=Quality Rating & Improvement System
T/TA=Training & Technical Assistance

O U T CO ME S

Partnership
Programs

Families

Systems Partners
(National, State, Local)

Short-Term Outcomes

Long-Term Outcomes

(within two years)

(two years or longer)

•	Enhanced capacity to offer high
quality service options that meet
families’ needs
•	Organizational leadership that
values and supports EHS-child care
partnerships
•	Staff attitudes that value each partner’s contribution to the partnership
•	Improved staff competencies to
develop mutually respectful and
collaborative partnerships, provide
effective QI support, and provide
developmentally appropriate
infant-toddler care
•	Improved quality of infant-toddler
care and compliance with HSPPS
•	Reduced isolation; increased membership in professional networks of
infant-toddler service providers
•	Increased professionalism and staff
credentials
•	Increased financial stability for partners

•	Sustained, mutually respectful,
and collaborative EHS-child
care partnerships in place

•	Stable access to high quality care
and comprehensive services that
meet families’ needs
•	Continuity of caregiving across
settings where children receive care
•	Parents more likely to be employed
or in school
•	Parents more involved in children’s
early learning

•	Well-aligned infant-toddler
policies, regulations, and QI
supports at the national, state,
and local levels

•	Increased community
supply of high-quality
infant-toddler care
•	Improved family well-being
•	Improved child well-being
and school readiness

•	Rule accommodations are implemented as needed to align requirements and stabilize funding
•	QI and professional development
supports are aligned to address
needs of the partnerships

Organizational Factors (partnership programs)

Contextual Factors

•	Years of operation and staff stability
•	Organizational culture and leadership promoting
the partnerships
•	Shared goals, relationship quality, and mutual respect
between partners
•	Systems to support continuous QI

•	Local: Type and supply of infant-toddler child care for
low-income families
•	State: Supports for QI (QRIS, CCDF quality dollars, etc.);
policy environment
•	National: Initiatives such as Head Start Designation
Renewal System, President’s Early Learning Initiative, Race
to the Top-Early Learning Challenge


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