Current Grantee Survey

Evaluation of Promise Neighborhoods

Appendix B. PN Survey Current Grantees 9 27 2021

Grantee Survey, District Administrative Records Request

OMB: 1850-0965

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PROMISE NEIGHBORHOODS GRANTEE SURVEY

(grantees from fiscal years 2016, 2017, or 2018)

Introduction and Instructions

The National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance within the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) at the U.S. Department of Education has contracted with Mathematica to conduct a study of the Promise Neighborhoods grant program which includes all current and previous Promise Neighborhood implementation grantees. The study is collecting information on the services implemented by Promise Neighborhood grantees during their 5-year grant period, as well as any challenges related to implementing grant activities.

We would like you to think about the Promise Neighborhood grant you received in Fiscal Year 2016, Fiscal Year 2017, or Fiscal Year 2018 when responding to data collection materials. Please exclude any planning grants you may have received when responding. Focus only on your experiences during the 5‑year implementation grant.

Instructions:

  • Select your desired response to each question in this Word document. Type your responses if applicable.

  • Some of the information we are asking for may be hard to recall or obtain. Please provide your best guess or estimate. We ask that you try to provide a response to each question in the survey. Some questions have a box you can mark if you are unable to provide a response. If you are unsure of how to answer a question you can contact the study team.

  • You may complete the survey with the input and contributions of other staff affiliated with the Promise Neighborhood.

  • We estimate that the survey and associated Excel workbook will take 75 minutes to complete, including time to locate information and talk with others at your organization.

We would like you to know the following:

  • Findings will be aggregated and incorporated into a public report. Your answers will be completely confidential and are protected from disclosure per the policies and procedures required by the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002, Title I, Part E, Section 183. We will not report information that identifies you, your organization, or your Promise Neighborhood to anyone outside the study team except if required by law. Your responses will be used only for statistical purposes. The reports prepared for this study will summarize findings across the sample and will not associate responses with a specific grantee, organization, Promise Neighborhood, or person. Any willful disclosure of such information for nonstatistical purposes, without your consent, is a class E felony.

  • Your answers to questions will not affect your job or any hiring decisions now or in the future and will only be shared with the study team (they will not be shared with anyone from your organization or Promise Neighborhood).

  • Participation in this survey does not pose any special risks to you. The study has safeguards in place to ensure respondents’ confidentiality, including restricted access to survey data and separating identifying information such as staff and organization names from survey responses. All members of the study team sign a confidentiality pledge, and all staff with access to identifiable study data have received clearance from the U.S. Department of Education and are subject to severe legal consequences for any breach of confidentiality. Any data that identifies you will be destroyed at the end of the study. If you have any questions about your rights as a research volunteer, contact HML IRB toll free at 202-246-8504 and reference IRB number 918MATH21.

I have read and I understand the above statements and agree to participate in the survey.

Key terms

Term

Definition

Your Promise Neighborhood

The entire initiative undertaken by your organization and the organizations you partnered with, as supported by the federal Promise Neighborhoods grant and other funding sources, to improve the educational and developmental outcomes of children and youth in a particular geographical area.

Promise Neighborhood footprint

The geographical area served by a Promise Neighborhood. This is also known as the catchment area.

Grantee organization

The organization that received a 5-year federal Promise Neighborhood implementation grant.

Partner or partner organization

An organization that partnered with the grantee organization to help implement the Promise Neighborhood and/or provide Promise Neighborhood services.

Promise Neighborhood target schools

The schools named in your application as target schools for coordination and implementation of Promise Neighborhood services.

Promise Neighborhood programs

This includes distinct programs, solutions, or other offerings provided to children, families, teachers, and community members by the Promise Neighborhood. Programs are often delivered through services, which can be provided by or with partner organizations. For example, a Promise Neighborhood might provide a wellness program focused on improving physical activity. They might deliver this program through several services, such as running clubs, walking clubs, dance classes, and student fitness classes. For the purposes of the survey, please include current programs, solutions, or other offerings as well as those previously provided during the 5-year grant period.

Promise Neighborhood services

Services are the method that providers use to directly deliver programs and solutions to children, families, teachers, and community members. For example, a Promise Neighborhood might provide a wellness program focused on improving physical activity. They might deliver this program through several services, such as running clubs, walking clubs, dance classes, and student fitness classes.

Cradle-to-career pipeline

A coordinated set of services to support success at every stage of a young person’s life. The pipeline includes education programs, solutions, and services across four stages: (1) programs during the early childhood years, (2) programs during grades K-12, (3) programs aimed at college and career success, and (4) family and community programs and services such as parenting support, housing assistance, health/nutrition services, workforce development, and community engagement.

Early childhood pipeline stage

Early learning policies, systems, programs, and services for children from birth through Kindergarten entry.

K-12 pipeline stage

Educational reforms, policies, systems, programs, and services for children and youth in Kindergarten through 12th grade.

College and career readiness pipeline stage

Policies, systems, programs, and services that prepare students for and help students persist in college and a career.

Family and community supports pipeline stage

Policies, systems, programs, and services that support families and the community, including health programs and services, safety programs and services, community stability programs and services, and family and community engagement programs and services.

SECTION A: PROGRAMS and SERVICES PROVIDED by your promise Neighborhood

The first set of questions asks about the programs and services your Promise Neighborhood is currently providing or has provided during your grant period. This includes programs and services that are provided (or partially provided) by partner organizations.

A1. In the space provided below, please enter the total number of distinct programs your Promise Neighborhood is providing, or has provided, during your grant period. This number can be found in column A of the “counts for survey” tab in the Excel spreadsheet.

  • Programs include distinct solutions or other offerings provided to children, families, teachers, and community members.

  • Programs are often delivered through services, which can be provided by or with partner organizations. For example, a Promise Neighborhood might provide a wellness program focused on improving physical activity. They might deliver this program through several services, such as running clubs, walking clubs, dance classes, and student fitness classes



  • Please count each program only once for this question, even if it is (or was) provided through multiple services, at multiple times throughout the grant period, or in multiple locations.

  • Please count all programs provided during the grant period, even if the program began or ended before or after the grant period.

  • Please include all programs provided during the grant period, even if they were funded by sources other than the Promise Neighborhood grant.

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TOTAL NUMBER OF PROGRAMS



















A2. Now think about the extent of these needs among the students and families served by your Promise Neighborhood during your grant period.

In column A, indicate the extent of each need for your Promise Neighborhood. Your answer does not need to correspond with the number of services provided; for example, the extent of need might be high even if few services focus on the need.

In column B, mark the top 3 needs for your Promise Neighborhood during the grant period by adding an X on three rows.

NEEDS OF STUDENTS AND FAMILIES

A

B

EXTENT OF NEED DURING GRANT PERIOD

(Mark one option per cell)

TOP 3 NEEDS (MARK ONLY 3)

  1. Improved academic skills

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

1

  1. Improved kindergarten readiness

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

2

  1. Improved student attendance

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

3

  1. Improved high school graduation rates

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

4

  1. Improved college enrollment, graduation, and vocational certification rates

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

5

  1. Improved school climate and safety

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

6

  1. Improved student access to internet and a connected computing device

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

7

  1. Improved employment, earnings, and income

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

8

  1. Improved availability of affordable housing

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

9

  1. Improved mental health

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

10

  1. Increased fruit and vegetable consumption

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

11

  1. Increased physical activity levels

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

12

  1. Increased child participation in early learning settings or programs

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

13

  1. Increased use of non-emergency medical facilities for young children

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

14

  1. More parents and families who read to or encourage children to read

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

15

  1. More parent/family discussion about importance of college and career

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

16

  1. Reductions in student mobility (entries and withdrawals from school)

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

17

  1. Reductions in juvenile delinquency, conviction, or incarceration

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

18

  1. Reductions in teen pregnancy

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

19

  1. Reductions in neonatal and maternal deaths

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

20

  1. Other needs (specify):

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

21

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  1. Other needs (specify):

0 None 1 Low 2 Moderate 3 High

22

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A3. We are interested in the extent to which services available to neighborhood residents changed from the three year period before the grant period to during the grant period.

In the grid below, please provide this information by pipeline stage, as defined in the Notice Inviting Applications for Promise Neighborhood grants (see the Key Terms table at the beginning of the survey for definitions of each pipeline stage).

PIPELINE STAGE

HOW DID THE AMOUNT OF SERVICES CHANGE FROM THE 3 YEAR PERIOD BEFORE THE GRANT TO DURING THE GRANT PERIOD?

a. Early childhood

1 Fewer services were provided before grant

2 More services were provided before grant

3 There was no change in the number of services

DK Don’t know

b. K-12 education

1 Fewer services were provided before grant

2 More services were provided before grant

3 There was no change in the number of services

DK Don’t know

c. College and career readiness

1 Fewer services were provided before grant

2 More services were provided before grant

3 There was no change in the number of services

DK Don’t know

d. Family and community supports

1 Fewer services were provided before grant

2 More services were provided before grant

3 There was no change in the number of services

DK Don’t know



We are also interested in understanding how services that existed before the Promise Neighborhoods grant changed during the current grant period. In the questions below, please indicate how services in each pipeline stage changed during the Promise Neighborhoods grant period, by comparing them to the three year period before the grant.

If services were not provided in a pipeline stage in the three year period before the grant, please select the box above that grid and skip to the next question.

A4. Changes in services provided in the early childhood pipeline stage

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N Services were not provided in the early childhood pipeline stage before the grant. GO TO A5.

During the grant period, do you: Mark one option per cell

  1. Serve more recipients than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Serve a new or different population than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide more training to service providers than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide more frequent or more hours of services than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide services that are more likely to be evidence-based than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No





A5. Changes in services provided in the K-12 education pipeline stage

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N Services were not provided in the K-12 education pipeline stage before the grant. GO TO A6.

During the grant period, do you: Mark one option per cell

  1. Serve more recipients than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Serve a new or different population than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide more training to service providers than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide more frequent or more hours of services than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide services that are more likely to be evidence-based than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No





A6. Changes in services provided in the college and career readiness pipeline stage

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N Services were not provided in the college and career readiness pipeline stage before the grant. GO TO A7.

During the grant period, do you: Mark one option per cell

  1. Serve more recipients than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Serve a new or different population than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide more training to service providers than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide more frequent or more hours of services than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide services that are more likely to be evidence-based than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No





A7. Changes in services provided in the family and community supports pipeline stage

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N Services were not provided in the family and community supports pipeline stage before the grant. GO TO A8.

During the grant period, do you: Mark one option per cell

  1. Serve more recipients than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Serve a new or different population than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide more training to service providers than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide more frequent or more hours of services than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No

  1. Provide services that are more likely to be evidence-based than before?

1 Yes for all services

2 Yes for most services

3 Yes for some services

4 No



A8. We are also interested in learning about how the needs and services provided by your Promise Neighborhood may have changed due to COVID-19.

In the box below, please briefly summarize any needs that emerged, or services that were added or expanded due to COVID-19. A few high-level bullets are adequate.

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SECTION b: STUDENTS AND SCHOOLS served by your promise neighborhood

The next set of questions asks about the students and schools served by your Promise Neighborhood during your grant period.


B1. During the grant period, of the children living in your Promise Neighborhood’s footprint, what percentage has received or currently receives at least one service provided by the Promise Neighborhood? Your best estimate is fine.

MARK ONE ONLY

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1 Less than 10% of children

2 11-25% of children

3 26-50% of children

4 51%-75% of children

5 76%-90% of children

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6 Over 90% of children GO TO B3

B2. Which of the factors listed below make it difficult to provide at least one service to 90 percent of the children living in your Promise Neighborhood’s footprint?

  • In column A, mark all of the factors that make it difficult to serve children living in your Promise Neighborhood.

  • In column B, mark the top three factors that make it difficult to serve children.

FACTORS THAT MAKE IT DIFFICULT TO PROVIDE SERVICES TO CHILDREN

A

B

MARK ALL THAT APPLY

TOP FACTORS (MARK ONLY 3)

  1. Families or children are not aware of the services offered

1

1

  1. Families or children do not feel like they need the services

2

2

  1. Families are reluctant to enroll children in services, due to lack of familiarity with the Promise Neighborhood

3

3

  1. Children do not have time to participate in services

4

4

  1. Children do not have transportation to access services

5

5

  1. Promise Neighborhood has inadequate partner capacity to deliver services

6

6

  1. Promise Neighborhood has inadequate financial resources to deliver services

7

7

  1. Promise Neighborhood has inadequate non-financial resources to deliver services, such as inadequate space or number of staff members

8

8

  1. Promise Neighborhood has inadequate support from district, schools, or district/school staff

9

9

  1. Promise Neighborhood intentionally targets services to certain populations of students

10

10

  1. Promise Neighborhood intentionally focuses on improving the quality of services rather than increasing the number of children receiving services

11

11

  1. Promise Neighborhood is still in the process of scaling services

12

12

  1. COVID-19 made it difficult to reach recipients or slowed implementation

13

13

  1. Other (specify):

14

14

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B3. Thinking about the services provided by your Promise Neighborhood during your grant period, on average, what proportion of recipients received the intended dosage (or close to the intended dosage) for the types of services listed below? In other words, how many recipients completed the program or participated in the service for the intended time and duration? Your best estimate is fine.

PIPELINE STAGE

INTENDED DOSAGE

(Mark one option per cell)

  1. Early childhood

1 0-25% of recipients received the intended dosage

2 26-50% of recipients received the intended dosage

3 51-75% of recipients received the intended dosage

4 76-100% of recipients received the intended dosage

  1. K-12 education

1 0-25% of recipients received the intended dosage

2 26-50% of recipients received the intended dosage

3 51-75% of recipients received the intended dosage

4 76-100% of recipients received the intended dosage

  1. College and career readiness

1 0-25% of recipients received the intended dosage

2 26-50% of recipients received the intended dosage

3 51-75% of recipients received the intended dosage

4 76-100% of recipients received the intended dosage

  1. Family and community supports

1 0-25% of recipients received the intended dosage

2 26-50% of recipients received the intended dosage

3 51-75% of recipients received the intended dosage

4 76-100% of recipients received the intended dosage

  1. Average across all services

1 0-25% of recipients received the intended dosage

2 26-50% of recipients received the intended dosage

3 51-75% of recipients received the intended dosage

4 76-100% of recipients received the intended dosage



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B4. If there are exceptions to the answers you selected for B3, or if you would like to provide more details, please use the space below.

B5. Thinking about the years of your grant:

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    1. On average, across all years of the grant, what percentage of children living in your Promise Neighborhood’s footprint have been enrolled in target schools? Your best guess is fine.

Percentage of children

DK I am unable to provide an estimate

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    1. On average, across all years of the grant, what percentage of children who attend target schools live outside your Promise Neighborhood’s footprint? Your best guess is fine.

Percentage of children

DK I am unable to provide an estimate

SECTION C: promise neighborhood funding

The next set of questions asks about the funding received by your Promise Neighborhood during your grant period.



C1a. How much funding—including in-kind contributions—have you received from sources other than your Promise Neighborhood grant to implement your Promise Neighborhood services across all years of your grant?

  • Please only count funding you have already received.

  • Please exclude any local, state, or federal funding related to COVID relief.

    Shape15

    $

  • Your best estimate is fine.



C1b. How much funding—including in-kind contributions—do you expect to receive -- but have not yet received -- from sources other than your Promise Neighborhood grant to implement your Promise Neighborhood services across all years of your grant?

  • Please exclude funding that you have already received.

  • Please exclude and any local, state, or federal funding related to COVID relief.

  • Your best estimate is fine.

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$



C2. We would like to know how resources are allocated across Promise Neighborhood activities. Please indicate what percentage of your total funding is spent on each budget category below. Your best estimates are fine, but your answers across all rows should sum to 100%.

BUDGET CATEGORY

PERCENTAGE OF FUNDING SPENT

  1. Adding new services

Shape17 Shape18


%

  1. Expanding existing services


%

  1. Investing in staffing and operations for grantee organization, including staff delivering services and staff managing Promise Neighborhood partnerships

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%

  1. Collecting data

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%

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  1. Other (specify):


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%



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C3. We are interested in learning how the COVID-19 pandemic influenced how you allocated Promise Neighborhood grant funds. In the box below, please briefly summarize whether you have needed to reallocate or divert funding within your Promise Neighborhood due to COVID. A few high-level bullets are adequate.





C4. We would like to know how resources are allocated across pipeline stages. Please rank the pipeline stages below, based on the amount of funding spent on each stage.

Record a 1 next to the pipeline stage that has used the highest amount of your funding. Record a 2 next to the stage that has used the second highest amount, and so on. The stage that has used the least amount of funding should be indicated with a 4.

PIPELINE STAGE

RANK (ENTER 1, 2, 3 OR 4)

(1 = HIGHEST AMOUNT OF FUNDING; 4= LOWEST AMOUNT OF FUNDING)

a. Early childhood

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b. K-12 education

Shape25


c. College and career readiness

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d. Family and community supports

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C5. We would like to know how resources dedicated to services were used across pipeline stages. Please indicate whether funds were spent primarily to expand/improve existing services or to add new services.

PIPELINE STAGE

PRIMARY USE OF FUNDING

(Mark one option per cell)

a. Early childhood

1 Expand/improve existing services

2 Add new services

b. K-12 education

1 Expand/improve existing services

2 Add new services

c. College and career readiness

1 Expand/improve existing services

2 Add new services

d. Family and community supports

1 Expand/improve existing services

2 Add new services





SECTION D: SERVICE IMPLEMENTATION

The questions in this section outline important tasks that can be used to achieve results through a Promise Neighborhoods cradle-to-career strategy.

Please indicate how challenging it has been for your Promise Neighborhood to accomplish each set of tasks while implementing your grant. For tasks that are currently a challenge, please indicate how challenging they are. For tasks that were a challenge at some point during the grant period, but are no longer a challenge, please indicate how challenging they were at the time.

D1. How challenging has it been to complete each of the following data use tasks during the grant period?

Mark one option per ROW

NOT CHALLENGING

SOMEWHAT CHALLENGING

VERY CHALLENGING

NOT APPLICABLE

  1. Collect data from schools, districts, partner organizations, or service providers

1

2

3

NA

  1. Develop and use a data system

1

2

3

NA

  1. Share individual-level data among partners

1

2

3

NA

  1. Analyze data

1

2

3

NA

  1. Use data on the performance of the Promise Neighborhood to establish accountability and continuously improve services

1

2

3

NA





D2. How challenging was it to complete each of the following tasks related to strategic and accountable partnerships during the grant period?

Mark one option per ROW

NOT CHALLENGING

SOMEWHAT CHALLENGING

VERY CHALLENGING

NOT APPLICABLE

  1. Identify partners

1

2

3

NA

  1. Establish contracts and/or memoranda of understanding with partners to lay out roles and responsibilities

1

2

3

NA

  1. Engage with partners to develop/provide Promise Neighborhood services

1

2

3

NA

  1. Scale up partner efforts to increase the number of individuals receiving Promise Neighborhood services

1

2

3

NA

  1. Manage the performance of partners

1

2

3

NA

D3. How challenging was it to complete each of the following community engagement tasks during the grant period?

Mark one option per ROW

NOT CHALLENGING

SOMEWHAT CHALLENGING

VERY CHALLENGING

NOT APPLICABLE

  1. Work with community members to help assess needs

1

2

3

NA

  1. Work with community members to design services to address those needs

1

2

3

NA

  1. Gain community buy-in for Promise Neighborhood activities/services

1

2

3

NA

  1. Raise community awareness of the services the Promise Neighborhood offers

1

2

3

NA

  1. Engage community members to participate in services

1

2

3

NA

  1. Engage community members to help deliver services

1

2

3

NA

  1. Use feedback from community members to continuously improve services

1

2

3

NA





D4. How challenging was it to complete each of the following sustainable financing tasks during the grant period?

Mark one option per ROW

NOT CHALLENGING

SOMEWHAT CHALLENGING

VERY CHALLENGING

NOT APPLICABLE

  1. Estimate the costs associated with providing services

1

2

3

NA

  1. Secure or redirect resources to support Promise Neighborhood activities/services

1

2

3

NA

  1. Develop and implement a business plan that allows for the continued delivery of Promise Neighborhood services after the federal grant ends

1

2

3

NA

  1. Scale up services that work

1

2

3

NA

















D5. How challenging was it to complete each of the following organizational and strategic capacity tasks during the grant period?

Mark one option per ROW

NOT CHALLENGING

SOMEWHAT CHALLENGING

VERY CHALLENGING

NOT APPLICABLE

  1. Expand staff within the grantee organization and partner organizations to support Promise Neighborhoods activities/services

1

2

3

NA

  1. Refine and improve processes within the grantee organization and partner organizations

1

2

3

NA

  1. Build organizational capacity by developing leadership skills

1

2

3

NA

  1. Plan for and deal with leadership changes and staff turnover

1

2

3

NA



































D6. If you answered “somewhat challenging” or “very challenging” to any of the tasks in D1 through D5, what strategies have you used to address the challenges and which strategies were the most useful?

  • In column A, indicate whether you have used the strategy to address challenges.

  • In column B, indicate how useful the strategy is.



STRATEGY

A

B

HAVE YOU USED THIS STRATEGY?

(If you mark No, you can skip column B for that row)

HOW USEFUL IS THIS STRATEGY FOR ADDRESSING CHALLENGES?

(Mark one option per cell)

  1. Worked with a national technical assistance provider

1 Yes 0 No

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1 Always or almost always useful

2 Sometimes useful

3 Rarely useful

4 Never useful

  1. Worked with a local consultant or contractor

1 Yes 0 No

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1 Always or almost always useful

2 Sometimes useful

3 Rarely useful

4 Never useful

  1. Consulted with another Promise Neighborhood grantee

1 Yes 0 No

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1 Always or almost always useful

2 Sometimes useful

3 Rarely useful

4 Never useful

  1. Engaged with a new partner organization or service provider

1 Yes 0 No

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1 Always or almost always useful

2 Sometimes useful

3 Rarely useful

4 Never useful

  1. Engaged with a new network (for example, the Promise Neighborhoods National Network Conference)

1 Yes 0 No

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1 Always or almost always useful

2 Sometimes useful

3 Rarely useful

4 Never useful

  1. Learned and adapted best practices from other communities

1 Yes 0 No

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1 Always or almost always useful

2 Sometimes useful

3 Rarely useful

4 Never useful

  1. Hired new staff with expertise in this area

1 Yes 0 No

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1 Always or almost always useful

2 Sometimes useful

3 Rarely useful

4 Never useful

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  1. Other strategy (specify):

1 Yes 0 No

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1 Always or almost always useful

2 Sometimes useful

3 Rarely useful

4 Never useful

D7. We are interested in learning how the COVID-19 pandemic contributed to implementation challenges. In the box below, please briefly summarize how the COVID-19 pandemic contributed to implementation challenges. A few high-level bullets are adequate.

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D8. During the implementation period for your Promise Neighborhood, how often have you accessed or participated in technical assistance provided by the U.S. Department of Education's Promise Neighborhoods team, local and national technical assistance providers, or anyone else?

MARK ONE ONLY

1 Frequently (more than 5 times a year, on average)

2 Sometimes (3-5 times a year, on average)

3 Rarely (0-2 times a year)

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4 Never GO TO D11



D9. How strongly do you agree or disagree with the following statement about the support and technical assistance you have received?

During the Promise Neighborhood implementation period, we have received the amount of support and technical assistance that we need/ed.

MARK ONE ONLY

1 Strongly agree

2 Agree

3 Disagree

4 Strongly Disagree



D10. During the implementation period for your Promise Neighborhood, how often was the support or technical assistance you received useful, meaning that it addressed your needs?

MARK ONE ONLY

The support and technical assistance…

1 Always or almost always addressed our needs

2 Sometimes addressed our needs

3 Rarely addressed our needs

4 Never addressed our needs



D11. Has the level of district involvement posed any challenges for your Promise Neighborhood at any point during the grant period?

MARK ALL THAT APPLY

1 Yes, lack of district involvement made or currently makes it difficult to implement programming and services

2 Yes, lack of district involvement made or currently makes it difficult to access outcome data

3 Yes, lack of district involvement made or currently makes it difficult to communicate with students and families

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4 Yes, the level of district involvement caused or currently causes some other challenge. Specify challenge:

5 No, the level of district involvement does not pose any challenges



D12. Has the level of school involvement posed any challenges for your Promise Neighborhood at any point during the grant period?

MARK ALL THAT APPLY

1 Yes, lack of school involvement makes it difficult to implement programming and services

2 Yes, lack of school involvement makes it difficult to access outcome data

3 Yes, lack of school involvement makes it difficult to communicate with students and families

Shape40

4 Yes, the level of school involvement causes some other challenge. Specify challenge:

5 No, the level of school involvement does not pose any challenges





D13. To what extent has your Promise Neighborhood increased use of the following strategies during the grant implementation period, compared to the 3 years before the grant was received? These strategies may be used to align efforts, coordinate programs/services, and connect partners.



If your organization did not exist before the grant, please mark the bubble below this sentence. Please skip to E1.

N We did not exist before the Promise Neighborhood grant.



If your organization did exist before the grant, please select one answer in each row below. Please select “Not Applicable” for any activity below that was not relevant to your organization before the Promise Neighborhood grant.

Mark one option per ROW

NO INCREASE DURING GRANT

INCREASED SOMEWHAT DRUING GRANT

INCREASED A GREAT EXTENT DURING GRANT

NOT APPLICABLE

  1. Invest in staffing and operations for an organization (which may have been the grantee organization), including dedicated staff to manage partnerships

1

2

3

4

  1. Organize working groups for partners to coordinate on aligning strategies and advancing results

1

2

3

4

  1. Share student and family referrals among partners

1

2

3

4

  1. Share intake and/or performance data among partners

1

2

3

4

  1. Track common performance measures across partners

1

2

3

4

  1. Use continuous quality improvement to inform services and resource allocation (by continuous quality improvement, we mean identifying needs, implementing services and strategies to address those needs, and assessing progress)

1

2

3

4

  1. Use a scorecard or data dashboard to share outcomes or performance data

1

2

3

4

  1. Develop individualized service plans for children to ensure each child receives a comprehensive and coordinated set of services designed to meet their specific needs

1

2

3

4

  1. Collect partner data in a single data system

1

2

3

4

  1. Use an integrated case management system to track program participants across multiple partner organizations

1

2

3

4

  1. Establish outcomes and targets in partner agreements, such as Memorandum of Understanding (MOUs) or contracts

1

2

3

4

  1. Have dedicated case managers to ensure each child’s services are coordinated and connected to each other

1

2

3

4

  1. Meet regularly with partners to discuss how to better coordinate and connect services for students across partner organizations

1

2

3

4

Shape41

n. Other (specify):




1

2

3

4





SECTION E: Background



E1. As the primary respondent of the survey, what years have you worked at the organization that received the Promise Neighborhood grant?

MARK ALL THE YEARS THAT APPLY

0 2010

1 2011

2 2012

3 2013

4 2014

5 2015

6 2016

7 2017

8 2018

9 2019

10 2020

11 2021


E2. If you consulted or worked with other staff to complete this survey or the Excel workbook, what years have those staff worked at the organization that received the Promise Neighborhood grant?

MARK ALL THE YEARS THAT APPLY

0 2010

1 2011

2 2012

3 2013

4 2014

5 2015

6 2016

7 2017

8 2018

9 2019

10 2020

11 2021

n Not applicable; I did not consult others


Thank you for taking the time to complete this survey!

File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
AuthorJennifer Herard
File Modified0000-00-00
File Created2021-10-05

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