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NOTICE:
The Head Start National Reporting System (NRS) has been
suspended. See Improving Head Start Act for School Readiness Act of 2007, Sec. 649(j)(4)
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The following is an excerpt from ...

The Head Start Child Outcomes
Framework
Outcomes Framework Overview
Language Development Literacy Mathematics
Science Creative Arts Social &
Emotional
Development Self-Concept
Self-Control
Cooperation
Social Relationships
Knowledge of Families
& Communities Approaches to Learning
Physical Health & Development
Gross Motor Skills
Fine Motor Skills
Health Status &
Practices
RELEASED IN 2000, THE HEAD START CHILD
OUTCOMES FRAMEWORK is intended to guide Head Start programs in their
curriculum planning and ongoing assessment of the progress and
accomplishments of children. The Framework also is helpful to
programs in their efforts to analyze and use data on child outcomes
in program self-assessment and continuous improvement. The Framework
is composed of 8 general Domains, 27 Domain Elements, and numerous
examples of specific Indicators of children's skills, abilities,
knowledge, and behaviors. The Framework is based on the Head Start
Program Performance Standards, Head Start Program Performance
Measures, provisions of the Head Start Act as amended in 1998,
advice of the Head Start Bureau Technical Work Group on Child
Outcomes, and a review of documents on assessment of young children
and early childhood program accountability from a variety of state
agencies and professional organizations.
- The Domains, Elements, and Indicators are presented as a
framework of building blocks that are important for school
success. The Framework is not an exhaustive list of everything a
child should know or be able to do by the end of Head Start or
entry into Kindergarten. The Framework is intended to guide
assessment of 3-to 5-year-old children— not infants or toddlers
enrolled in Early Head Start and not infants or toddlers in
Migrant Head Start programs.
- The Framework guides agencies in selecting, developing, or
adapting an instrument or set of tools for ongoing assessment of
children's progress. It is inappropriate to use the Framework as a
checklist for assessing children. It also is inappropriate to use
items in the Framework in place of thoughtful curriculum planning
and individualization.
- Every Head Start program implements an appropriate child
assessment system that aligns with their curriculum and gathers
data on children's progress in each of the 8 Domains of learning
and development. At a minimum, because they are legislatively
mandated, programs analyze data on 4 specific Domain Elements and
9 Indicators in various language, literacy, and numeric skills, as
indicated with a star in the chart. Local program child assessment
occurs at least three times a year. The National Reporting System
(NRS) child assessment includes measures of the mandated child
outcomes.
- Information on children's progress on the Domains, Domain
Elements, and Indicators is obtained from multiple sources, such
as teacher and home visitor observations, analysis of samples of
children's work and performance, parent reports, or direct
assessment of children. Head Start assessment practices should
reflect the assumption that children demonstrate progress over
time in development and learning on a developmental continuum, in
forms such as increasing frequency of a behavior or ability,
increasing breadth or depth of knowledge and understanding, or
increasing proficiency or independence in exercising a skill or
ability.
The English version of the Head
Start Child Outcomes Framework was translated into Spanish by the
Migrant and Seasonal Head Start Quality Improvement Center. The
Spanish version of the Head Start Child Outcomes Framework can be
accessed at www.mhsqic.org/spandocs/spandocs.htm.
(From The Head Start Path to Positive Child
Outcomes, updated Summer 2003)

LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT
- Listening & Understanding
- Demonstrates increasing ability to attend to and understand
conversations, stories, songs, and poems.
- Shows progress in understanding and following simple and
multiple-step directions.
- Understands an increasingly complex and varied
vocabulary. *
- For non-English-speaking children, progresses in
listening to and understanding English. *
- Speaking & Communicating
- Develops increasing abilities to understand and use
language to communicate information, experiences, ideas,
feelings, opinions, needs, questions; and for other varied
purposes. *
- Progresses in abilities to initiate and respond
appropriately in conversation and discussions with peers and
adults.
- Uses an increasingly complex and varied spoken
vocabulary. *
- Progresses in clarity of pronunciation and towards speaking
in sentences of increasing length and grammatical complexity.
- For non-English-speaking children, progresses in
speaking English. *

LITERACY
- Phonological Awareness *
- Shows increasing ability to discriminate and identify sounds
in spoken language.
- Shows growing awareness of beginning and ending sounds of
words.
- Progresses in recognizing matching sounds and rhymes in
familiar words, games, songs, stories, and poems.
- Shows growing ability to hear and discriminate separate
syllables in words.
- Associates sounds with written words , such as awareness
that different words begin with the same sound. *
- Book Knowledge & Appreciation *
- Shows growing interest and involvement in listening to and
discussing a variety of fiction and non-fiction books and
poetry.
- Shows growing interest in reading-related activities, such
as asking to have a favorite book read; choosing to look at
books; drawing pictures based on stories; asking to take books
home; going to the library; and engaging in pretend-reading with
other children.
- Demonstrates progress in abilities to retell and dictate
stories from books and experiences; to act out stories in
dramatic play; and to predict what will happen next in a story.
- Progresses in learning how to handle and care for books;
knowing to view one page at a time in sequence from front to
back; and understanding that a book has a title, author, and
illustrator.
- Print Awareness & Concepts *
- Shows increasing awareness of print in classroom, home, and
community settings.
- Develops growing understanding of the different functions of
forms of print such as signs, letters, newspapers, lists,
messages, and menus.
- Demonstrates increasing awareness of concepts of print, such
as that reading in English moves from top to bottom and from
left to right, that speech can be written down, and that print
conveys a message.
- Shows progress in recognizing the association between spoken
and written words by following print as it is read aloud.
- Recognizes a word as a unit of print, or awareness that
letters are grouped to form words, and words are separated by
spaces. *
- Early Writing
- Develops understanding that writing is a way of
communicating for a variety of purposes.
- Begins to represent stories and experiences through
pictures, dictation, and in play.
- Experiments with a growing variety of writing tools and
materials, such as pencils, crayons, and computers.
- Progresses from using scribbles, shapes, or pictures to
represent ideas, to using letter-like symbols, to copying or
writing familiar words such as their own name.
- Alphabet Knowledge
- Shows progress in associating the names of letters with
their shapes and sounds.
- Increases in ability to notice the beginning letters in
familiar words.
- Identifies at least 10 letters of the alphabet, especially
those in their own name. *
- Knows that letters of the alphabet are a special category of
visual graphics that can be individually named. *

MATHEMATICS
- Number & Operations *
- Demonstrates increasing interest and awareness of numbers
and counting as a means for solving problems and determining
quantity.
- Begins to associate number concepts, vocabulary, quantities,
and written numerals in meaningful ways.
- Develops increasing ability to count in sequence to 10 and
beyond.
- Begins to make use of one-to-one correspondence in counting
objects and matching groups of objects.
- Begins to use language to compare numbers of objects with
terms such as more, less, greater than, fewer, equal to.
- Develops increased abilities to combine, separate and name
"how many" concrete objects.
- Geometry & Spatial Sense
- Begins to recognize, describe, compare, and name common
shapes, their
parts and attributes.
- Progresses in ability to put together and take apart shapes.
- Begins to be able to determine whether or not two shapes are
the same size and shape.
- Shows growth in matching, sorting, putting in a series, and
regrouping objects according to one or two attributes such as
color, shape, or size.
- Builds an increasing understanding of directionality, order,
and positions of objects, and words such as up, down, over,
under, top, bottom, inside, out-side, in front, and behind.
- Patterns & Measurement
- Enhances abilities to recognize, duplicate, and extend
simple patterns using a variety of materials.
- Shows increasing abilities to match, sort, put in a series,
and regroup objects according to one or two attributes such as
shape or size.
- Begins to make comparisons between several objects based on
a single attribute.
- Shows progress in using standard and non-standard measures
for length and area of objects.

SCIENCE
- Scientific Skills & Methods
- Begins to use senses and a variety of tools and simple
measuring devices to gather information, investigate materials,
and observe processes and relationships.
- Develops increased ability to observe and discuss common
properties, differences and comparisons among objects and
materials.
- Begins to participate in simple investigations to test
observations, discuss and draw conclusions, and form
generalizations.
- Develops growing abilities to collect, describe, and record
information through a variety of means, including discussion,
drawings, maps, and charts.
- Begins to describe and discuss predictions, explanations,
and generalizations
based on past experiences.
- Scientific Knowledge
- Expands knowledge of and abilities to observe, describe, and
discuss the natural world, materials, living things, and natural
processes.
- Expands knowledge of and respect for their bodies and the
environment.
- Develops growing awareness of ideas and language related to
attributes of time and temperature.
- Shows increased awareness and beginning understanding of
changes in materials and cause-effect relationships.

CREATIVE ARTS
- Music
- Participates with increasing interest and enjoyment in a
variety of music activities, including listening, singing,
finger plays, games, and performances.
- Experiments with a variety of musical instruments.
- Art
- Gains ability in using different art media and materials in
a variety of ways for creative expression and representation.
- Progresses in abilities to create drawings, paintings,
models, and other art creations that are more detailed,
creative, or realistic.
- Develops growing abilities to plan, work independently, and
demonstrate care and persistence in a variety of art projects.
- Begins to understand and share opinions about artistic
products and experiences.
- Movement
- Expresses through movement and dancing what is felt and
heard in various musical tempos and styles.
- Shows growth in moving in time to different patterns of beat
and rhythm in music.
- Dramatic Play
- Participates in a variety of dramatic play activities that
become more extended and complex.
- Shows growing creativity and imagination in using materials
and in assuming different roles in dramatic play situations.
SOCIAL & EMOTIONAL DEVELOPMENT
- Self-Concept
- Begins to develop and express awareness of self in terms of
specific abilities, characteristics, and preferences.
- Develops growing capacity for independence in a range of
activities, routines, and tasks.
- Demonstrates growing confidence in a range of abilities and
expresses pride in accomplishments.
- Self-Control
- Shows progress in expressing feelings, needs, and opinions
in difficult situations and conflicts without harming
themselves, others, or property.
- Develops growing understanding of how their actions affect
others and begins to accept the consequences of their actions.
- Demonstrates increasing capacity to follow rules and
routines and use
materials purposefully, safely, and
respectfully.
- Cooperation
- Increases abilities to sustain interactions with peers by
helping, sharing, and discussion.
- Shows increasing abilities to use compromise and discussion
in working, playing, and resolving conflicts with peers.
- Develops increasing abilities to give and take in
interactions; to take turns in games or using materials; and to
interact without being overly submissive or directive.
- Social Relationships
- Demonstrates increasing comfort in talking with and
accepting guidance and directions from a range of familiar
adults.
- Shows progress in developing friendships with peers.
- Progresses in responding sympathetically to peers who are in
need, upset, hurt, or angry; and in expressing empathy or caring
for others.
- Knowledge of Families & Communities
- Develops ability to identify personal characteristics,
including gender and family composition.
- Progresses in understanding similarities and respecting
differences among people, such as genders, race, special needs,
culture, language, and family structures.
- Develops growing awareness of jobs and what is required to
perform them.
- Begins to express and understand concepts and language of
geography in the contexts of the classroom, home, and community.

APPROACHES TO LEARNING
- Initiative & Curiosity
- Chooses to participate in an increasing variety of tasks and
activities.
- Develops increased ability to make independent choices.
- Approaches tasks and activities with increased flexibility,
imagination, and inventiveness.
- Grows in eagerness to learn about and discuss a growing
range of topics, ideas, and tasks.
- Engagement & Persistence
- Grows in abilities to persist in and complete a variety of
tasks, activities, projects, and experiences.
- Demonstrates increasing ability to set goals and develop and
follow through on plans.
- Shows growing capacity to maintain concentration over time
on a task, question, set of directions or interactions, despite
distractions and interruptions.
- Reasoning & Problem Solving
- Develops increasing ability to find more than one solution
to a question, task, or problem.
- Grows in recognizing and solving problems through active
exploration, including trial and error, and interactions and
discussions with peers and adults.
- Develops increasing abilities to classify, compare and
contrast objects, events, and experiences.
PHYSICAL HEALTH & DEVELOPMENT
- Gross Motor Skills
- Shows increasing levels of proficiency, control, and balance
in walking, climbing, running, jumping, hopping, skipping,
marching, and galloping.
- Demonstrates increasing abilities to coordinate movements in
throwing, catching, kicking, bouncing balls, and using the slide
and swing.
- Fine Motor Skills
- Develops growing strength, dexterity, and control needed to
use tools such as scissors, paper punch, stapler, and hammer.
- Grows in hand-eye coordination in building with blocks,
putting together puzzles, reproducing shapes and patterns,
stringing beads, and using scissors.
- Progresses in abilities to use writing, drawing, and art
tools, including pencils, markers, chalk, paint brushes, and
various types of technology.
- Health Status & Practices
- Progresses in physical growth, strength, stamina, and
flexibility.
- Participates actively in games, outdoor play, and other
forms of exercise that enhance physical fitness.
- Shows growing independence in hygiene, nutrition, and
personal care when eating, dressing, washing hands, brushing
teeth, and toileting.
- Builds awareness and ability to follow basic health and
safety rules such as fire safety, traffic and pedestrian safety,
and responding appropriately to potentially harmful objects,
substances, and activities.

* Indicates the 4 specific Domain Elements and 9
Indicators that are legislatively mandated.
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"The Head Start Child Outcomes Framework." Head Start Child Outcomes—Setting the Context for the National Reporting System. Head Start Bulletin #76. DHHS/ACF/ACYF/HSB. 2003. English.
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