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Minnesota Quality Rating and Improvement System Scaling Options: Presentation to Early Childhood Committee Anne Mitchell Louise Stoney MN Work Group February 16, 2010
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Agenda Goal & Process Guiding Principles 3 QRIS Options Financial Worksheets Design Elements & Trade-offs Existing Funding
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Goal & Process Goal: Provide Early Childhood Caucus with financial models to be used to determine costs of implementing a statewide QRIS Process: National experts with QRIS and finance knowledge, supported by local work group providing Minnesota-specific information and context
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Guiding Principles 1. Outcome focus: Improve children’s school readiness. 2. Empower parents 3. Use the research 4. Value cultural relevance 5. Increase quality 6. Link and leverage 7. Dynamic and responsive
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Design Elements & Trade-offs Quality Assurance Data System Supports for Improvement Professional development for practitioners Technical assistance for programs Facility improvements Incentives Program Practitioners Consumers/parents Communications/marketing/outreach Evaluation
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3 QRIS Options
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Option 1: Parent Aware Pilot Model Quality assurance - annual onsite observations of every program Supports No professional development, facilities improvement, or practitioner incentives within QRIS Directive technical assistance Average quality grants of $2,400/program Incentives Pre-K Allowances Explicit focus on school readiness
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Option 1: Parent Aware Pilot Model Pros Focused on school readiness Builds on pilot infrastructure and momentum Programs receive quality improvement reports Strong evaluation of outcomes Parent-focused Focus on supporting culturally-specific providers Cons Expensive quality assurance Pre-K Allowances were not renewed Not yet validated (in process)
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Option 2: North Carolina Model Quality assurance – streamlined standards Supports Builds on the state’s very strong existing professional development and technical assistance infrastructure Responsive TA Facilities improvement funds Incentives Wage subsidies for providers Tiered reimbursement linked to ratings 100% participation – linked to licensing
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Option 2: North Carolina Model Pros Streamlines cost by embedding QRIS in overall ECE system Cons Licensing-based system would not automatically include school-based programs in Minnesota Significant shift from Parent Aware pilot model Responsive technical assistance Shared monitoring Provider and practitioner funding linked to QRIS Minnesota lacks North Carolina’s existing ECE resources for technical assistance and professional development
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Option 3: Maine Model Quality assurance – provider-directed with desk monitoring and online provider handbook Supports Responsive technical assistance through existing providers Strong existing professional development system Tax credits for facility improvements Incentives Quality bonuses to providers based on ratings
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Option 3: Maine Model Pros Least expensive Least arduous for providers Like Parent Aware, QRIS is linked to professional development registry Cons Embedded in state’s professional development system, which is much stronger than what exists in Minnesota Requires stronger evaluation component to validated connection between ratings and school readiness
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