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 Sets & establishes standards through legislation and Title 5  Maintains standards through regional accreditation processes.

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Presentation on theme: " Sets & establishes standards through legislation and Title 5  Maintains standards through regional accreditation processes."— Presentation transcript:

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2  Sets & establishes standards through legislation and Title 5  Maintains standards through regional accreditation processes

3 We urge California Teacher Credentialing to afford young children the same promise offered to school age children by only allowing courses taking at regionally accredited institutions to count toward a California Child Development Permit.

4 The quality of education received by California’s youngest residents will be determined by your decision.

5  Have a complete rigorous program review process  Have established Student Learning Outcomes (SLOs)  Have developed Course and Program Outcomes and Assessment Cycles

6  Curriculum Alignment Project  Higher Education Colloquium for Early Care & Education  Associate Degree for Transfer (AS-T) in development

7  ECE programs have worked with CDE on developing  the Infant/Toddler and Preschool Foundations  The Infant/Toddler and Preschool Frameworks AND  Are working to incorporate both into ECE/CD coursework

8  Developed Early Childhood Educator Competencies that describe core knowledge, skills, and dispositions  A proven track record in birth to 5 teacher preparation

9  Degree programs at accredited college and /or universities are the essential core of effective professional practice  Highly qualified ECE professionals are those who hold academic degrees

10  California Early Learning Quality Improvement System Advisory Committee’s Final Report states  Staff education and training criteria…encompass..the following: ▪ Formal education –credit bearing courses, including degrees and certificates

11  In a variety of formats  On campus  Off campus  Day time  Evening  Weekend  Accelerated  Distance Education

12  CREDIT STUDENTS 3,020  NONCREDIT STUDENTS2,214  Unduplicated student count 5,084  Course Sections  185 credit  104 noncredit

13  Child Development Permits processed through CCSF Early Childhood Professional Development Program 741  Child Development Training Consortium (CDTC) Reimbursements to Students Employed in Licensed Facilities274 ▪ 100 unduplicated centers represented ▪ 47 Family Child Care (FCC) providers/workers ▪ (38 unduplicated FCC)

14  1298 of the 3020 CDEV students in 2009-10 in credit had Board of Governors Grant (BOG) fee waivers  Financial aid only gives this designation to students who are low income

15  Between 500-600 CCSF students each semester indicate that they are interested in becoming a K-12 teacher

16  College courses are sustainable and can generate revenue from the CCCCO  Students that leave the field with an advanced degree can benefit when seeking a new career  Staff can mentor and provide direct support to the parents and children in their programs seeking college navigational assistance  In San Francisco, our the CDEV Dept. averages 5- 6 new courses annually, reflecting an ability to meet changing demands and trends. Special needs, dual language acquisition, emotional and social child development, infant-toddler relationship care giving have been the foundation for newly introduced courses in the Department over the last two years in response to external demands.

17  In our Department, courses are paired with ESL classes and 30 units annually are offered bi- lingually in Cantonese, Mandarin and Spanish.  Verification systems like transcripts and report cards are in place to ensure participation and individual reporting  Accommodations for learning differences are mandated.  Access throughout California to courses with uniform content standards is possible through credit-bearing coursework delivered in the community colleges

18  Supports and endorses the Curriculum Alignment Project (F 07 9.03)  Has several resolutions that call on the CDE to “rely primarily” on CD/ECE faculty in CCC on matters related to certificates, degrees, and training for the workforce (S 10 9.03)

19  Advisable to develop, especially with increased Transitional Kindergarten options  Strengthens the argument for only allowing WASC accredited college courses to apply to permit  Responds to increased student plans to work in K-12

20  Core courses are foundational to essential skill and knowledge and should be offered as unit-bearing courses at colleges/universities  To offer professional growth extensions, agencies must have accreditation and accountability systems behind them related to rigorous teacher preparation

21  California Educational system has an accepted accreditation process  Private colleges could choose to participate in the same accreditation processes as CCC  Accreditation is California’s assurance that established educational standards are maintained  CCC ECE programs collaborate with 4-year institutions and with CDD

22  Neuroscience and Cognition studies point to the importance of the first five years in building a foundation for all later learning.  Educating children in this period of childhood can either seriously compromise or strengthen whether children will achieve in elementary school.  The quality of education received by California’s youngest residents will be determined by your decision.


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