Report / In Depth

Mixed Delivery, Stronger Results: How to Intentionally Design Local Early Childhood Systems

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Abstract

Mixed delivery models are systems in which early childhood services are delivered by multiple types of entities, including school-based, public, and private care centers, and are a common solution to meeting demand in local early childhood systems. By working with a diverse set of public and private early childhood providers, system leaders can build sufficient (and sufficiently diverse) supply to meet family demand. There is a significant and growing body of research about mixed delivery models, though it is mostly focused at the state level. Designing mixed delivery models at the local level is becoming more important as localities strive to reach more children with publicly funded early childhood services. There is no one “right” way to build a mixed delivery model—design choices are laden with trade-offs between equity, quality, and capacity, and those decisions must be made within the local context. This report outlines the different design decisions that system leaders may face, how different leaders have approached those decisions, and some of the benefits and considerations. A better understanding of how different localities have navigated these trade-offs and unpacking the underlying tensions can help system leaders make smarter design choices to meet their community’s needs.

The New Practice Lab convenes the Early Care and Education Implementation Working Group, a group of early care and education leaders from across the country. They are committed to delivering high-quality early childhood services to families—and know that implementation is everything. This is the fifth publication based on lessons from this group; see our previous publications on Family Outreach, Centralized Enrollment, Participatory Planning, and Local Governance for a deep dive into some of the findings from the working group.

Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank members of the ECE Implementation Working Group for providing insight into their local early childhood program design and how they have worked to build more equitable mixed delivery models.

Editorial disclosure: The views expressed in this report are solely those of the authors and do not reflect the views of New America, its staff, fellows, funders, or board of directors.

More About the Authors

lisslazarmarcgoldbergphotography-258
Emmy Liss

Independent Researcher and Policy Consultant

Mixed Delivery, Stronger Results: How to Intentionally Design Local Early Childhood Systems

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