Webinar: Advancing Equity in Pre-K Systems with Family Child Care Providers and Families 

A wooden box holds colorful pencils arranged upright with a blurred background.

Thursday, August 10, 2023, 1:30-2:30 Eastern (10:30-11:30 Pacific)

As state and city leaders around the country and the federal government continue to signal interest in expanding the reach of pre-K programs, there is a vibrant conversation regarding mixed-delivery service provision. Mixed-delivery systems with a goal to reach underserved children, families and providers must include family child care providers and the children and families that they serve. Family child care and other home-based child care programs are the first choice of many families and are a mainstay for families of color, those in rural communities, those who speak languages other than English, and those who work nontraditional hours.

Despite the interest and discussion of mixed-delivery pre-K, a recent study by National Institute on Early Education Research (NIEER) illustrated that fewer than 1% of providers in most pre-K systems are family child care providers. Exclusion of these providers from formal pre-K systems is a loss for the system and further marginalizes the families and providers who can benefit from the resource and opportunities offered via state, city and county-funded pre-K programs. 

Join Home Grown and its partners at the Pre-K in Family Child Care Project Team (Erikson Institute, University of Delaware & University of North Carolina Equity Action Research Coalition) and NIEER on August 10th for a webinar focused on our shared work to better understand how we can build a mixed-delivery pre-K system that serves diverse families by including family child care. 

Webinar participants will have the opportunity to hear directly from family child care providers who implement pre-K and how their experiences can inform our collective thinking on mixed-delivery approaches. Webinar participants will also learn key principles for equitable inclusion of family  child care in pre-K systems  along with the necessary policy conditions for success. 

We encourage state, county and city leaders and pre-K advocates at various stages in your journey of including family child care in pre-K systems to join us. 

Co-Sponsored by the National Association for Family Child Care (NAFCC) and the National Association of Counties (NACo).

Women’s contributions and experiences are not well represented in the record books, but it is just as rich and worth celebrating. Ours is a tale of community, resilience, and connection to one another, and it is inextricably linked with care work. 
During Women’s History Month, we celebrate the contributions that women have made to every corner of our society and honor their achievements. Among these leaders are the more than 5 million women who form the backbone of home-based child care (HBCC).
For generations, Black home-based child care providers have built systems of care rooted in community, trust, and resilience, often stepping in where formal systems fell short. Of the over 5 million home-based child care providers, including Family Child Care providers and paid and unpaid Family Friend and Neighbor caregivers, roughly a quarter in each subgroup identify as Black Non-Hispanic