Laura Bornfreund
Senior Fellow, Early & Elementary Education
This is the first post in a month-long series examining the nine winning states in the 2011 Race to the Top – Early Learning Challenge (RTT-ELC) and their plans to improve the quality and coordination of early childhood programs. This post focuses on the use of quality rating improvement systems (QRIS). Later posts will explore states’ plans to evaluate those rating systems, improve early learning standards, develop the early childhood workforce and implement kindergarten entry assessments.
When the Obama Administration unveiled its priorities for the early childhood version of Race to the Top, two focus areas were apparent at the start: improving access to high-quality early learning programs for high-need children and creating coordinated systems of early education, birth through pre-kindergarten. To do both, the administration designed the competition to favor states with big plans for rating the quality of childcare and pre-K programs and using those ratings to prompt improvements.
These rating systems – known as tiered Quality Rating and Improvement Systems (QRIS) – became a critical part of the grant competition. All the winners, with the exception of California, which we’ll talk about shortly, got high marks for their plans.
QRISs, which are compared to market-based approaches like hotel ratings, often use a simple 3-, 4- or 5-star rating to summarize information on quality in multiple categories, such as child/staff ratios and teacher credentials. States publish the ratings on Web sites and in community brochures so that parents (the consumers) can make smart choices about where to enroll their children.* The ratings are also supposed to help determine what types of professional development may be required by different centers to achieve higher levels of quality. The ratings are designed to help ensure that public childcare subsidies – many of which are paid to low-income parents in the forms of vouchers – go to providers with some evidence of providing a good experience for children.
All states vying for the grant were required to complete a “core area” in the RTT-ELC application titled “High Quality, Accountable Programs.” Peer reviewers were employed to read those applications and score them according to set criteria. In this section, the Departments of Education and Health and Human Services asked states to:
1. Explain how they have implemented or plan to implement a system that is linked to the state’s licensing system, includes standards that are measurable and that differentiate between levels of program quality, and adopts a statewide set of tiered program standards.
2. Describe how they will promote participation in the QRIS among early education programs for children from birth through 5, including:
(They also had to explain how they have implemented or plan to implement policies and practices that help more families afford high-quality childcare.)
3. Explain how they will rate and monitor participating programs and provide tiered QRIS and licensing information to parents.
4. Describe their plan to improve the quality of programs participating in the tiered QRIS.
5. Validate the effectiveness of their QRIS in at least two ways:
We’ll get to the last bullet in our next post. For now, we’ll focus on which states scored the highest on the first four areas above, based on peer reviewers’ scores. (Thanks to Sara Mead – an EdWeek blogger, senior associate at Bellwether Education Partners, and former director of the Early Education Initiative here at New America – for compiling all the scores and making them available in an easy-to-read spreadsheet.):
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A Core Area of the RTT-ELC Application: High Quality, Accountable Programs |
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Sub-section |
Point Value |
High-scoring States |
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1. Development of or plan to develop statewide TQRIS |
10 |
Massachusetts (10 points), Delaware (9.4), Ohio (9) |
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2. Promote participation among programs and help families afford high-quality programs |
15 |
Massachusetts (14), North Carolina (13.4), Ohio (13.4) |
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3. Rate and Monitor programs |
15 |
Delaware (14.4), North Carolina (13.6), Arkansas (13) |
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4. Improve program quality |
20 |
North Carolina (19.2), Delaware (18), Oregon (18) |
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Key: * = non-winners |
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It’s not surprising that North Carolina made the top in almost every section; the state implemented its original QRIS in 1999, and then revised it in 2005. North Carolina has been doing this work a long time.
The winners put forth thoughtful plans to encourage participation and improve program quality. Many of the states that won grants included a 100 percent participation goal for all licensed and publicly funded programs, including home daycare providers, state-funded pre-K programs, Head Stars and center-based early learning programs. Rhode Island, for example, will require all licensed programs to participate in BrightStars, the state’s QRIS, by making licensing the first tier of its rating system. And beginning in 2014, the state will also require all programs receiving state or federal funds to participate.
We also noticed several categories of innovations. Below are some of the main categories we spotted, along with some examples from winning states.
Assessing quality with tools for observing interactions between teachers and children
Tying subsidies to highly rated programs
Easing administrative burdens
Creating professional-development and resource hubs
There is one RTT-ELC winner that plans to do things a little differently. California will establish 16 regional tiered QRISs instead of a statewide system. This did not put the state at a disadvantage because officials explained in the application that each regional consortium would align their local system with the set of statewide program standards – a requirement of the competition. California plans to leave much of the QRIS design up to the local consortia, including incentives, the details of the rating system and the creation of tiers and benchmarks. The potential strength in California’s plan is that the state will expect the consortia to mentor and support each other as they work toward building sound systems that meet the needs of their respective communities.
Look for our next post in this series later this week, which will explore how states plan to evaluate these rating systems.
*For more on how QRISs work, see our 2009 issue brief as well as resources from the National Association for the Education of Young Children and the Center for Law and Social Policy. Also be sure to visit our special page on the Race to the Top – Early Learning Challenge for continuing coverage.