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Smart Start is North Carolina's nationally recognized comprehensive initiative to improve its early care and education system with the goal of ensuring that all children under kindergarten age are healthy and prepared for school. For the first 10 years of Smart Start (1993-2003), a team of researchers at the Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill conducted the statewide evaluation of Smart Start. Members of the multidisciplinary evaluation team were from UNC's School of Education, Public Health, and Social Work. The team conducted dozens of studies of Smart Start and developed an evaluation notebook to assist local Smart Start Partnership evaluators. This project employed a multi-disciplinary team of specialists and researchers from the following university departments and research centers: Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute, School of Social Work, and School of Public Health - all part of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Smart Start is a multi-disciplinary, comprehensive, community based initiative designed to serve North Carolina children under age 6 and their families. The major long-range goal of Smart Start is to ensure that all children enter school healthy and prepared to succeed. To achieve this goal, local county Smart Start partnerships have focused both their attention and funds on three major areas of service implementation: child care, family support programs, and health services. The evaluation team considered changes in these three areas to be intermediate-term outcomes; that is, changes that should lead to the longer-range goal of increased preparedness for school. Therefore, major evaluation projects have included measuring changes in child care quality, family functioning, and children's receipt of health services, as well as the long-term outcome of school success. Additional evaluation projects have focused on other components of the Smart Start Initiative, such as the planning and implementation process of partnership start-up, collaboration among service agencies, the public-private partnership in communities, and special studies addressing particular services funded through Smart Start. For more information on Smart Start, visit the North Carolina Smart Start web site. Timeline of Smart Start Evaluation Activities of the Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute
To reach us: Smart Start
Evaluation Team Phone:
919.966.2559 |
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