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ABSTRACT

Research Findings: This study examined the development and implementation of six Early Head Start Child Care Partnerships (EHS-CCPs), unique collaborations between EHS grantees and community-based child care partners that expand access to high-quality child care and comprehensive services for low-income infants, toddlers, and their families. Interviews and focus groups with 111 key informants identified similarities across the six EHS-CCPs in initial outreach to community partners for establishing partnerships and approaches to developing partnership agreements but variation in approaches to monitoring quality improvement activities. Benefits and challenges to partnerships for programs and families were noted. Practice or Policy: Findings suggest a need for additional guidance for EHS-CCPs on key components of implementation, including the partnership agreement process, monitoring quality improvement plans, offering support for meeting program requirements, and providing comprehensive services. For example, five of the six partnerships reported the EHS grantee led the development of their partnership agreements. While this approach was attributed to child care partners’ lack of prior experience in developing agreements, further guidance on how to engage partners collaboratively in an agreement process that better emulates the principles of authenticity and equality from the conceptual framework for collaborations in early care and education would be useful.

Acknowledgments

We are grateful to the foundation and our project officer, Jenefer O’Dell, for helping to make this work possible. The views expressed in this paper are those of the authors and should not be attributed to the funder. The authors express appreciation to Selma Caal for her assistance in data collection for this study and to Julianna Carlson for her contributions to the project. The authors also extend a special thank you to Lauren Supplee, Diane Schilder, and several anonymous reviewers for their careful review of this paper and recommendations for strengthening it. We are also grateful to the key informants across the six partnership sites for their participation in this study and commitment to advancing the field’s knowledge about early care and education partnerships and collaboration.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This study was funded by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation under grant #P3034917.
 

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