East Coast Migrant Head Start Project (ECMHSP),
like every other Head Start program in this country, is actively
engaged in meeting the challenge of implementing the legislative
changes concerning Head Start program and child outcomes. These
include, "establishing additional results-based educational
performance standards and performance measures, and adapting these
standards and measures for use by programs in their
self-assessments..." (ACYF-IM-HS-00-18, 8/10/00).
This
challenge offers us an opportunity to take a step back and look at
what we already are doing to measure child outcomes, and what still
needs to be done. It entails reviewing our current screening and
assessment system, particularly our assessment tool and process. For
many years, ECMHSP centers have used the Denver II to screen all
children, and the Early Learning Accomplishment Profile (E-LAP: ages
birth to 3 years) and Learning Accomplishment Profile (LAP: ages 3
to 6 years) for ongoing assessment and to track children's progress
across a broad range of skills. We are asking ourselves a specific
question: Does the E-LAP/LAP provide adequate child outcome
information? If not, what other assessment tool does?
This, of course, raises other questions: What
criteria will we use to evaluate different assessment tools? How
would a change of assessment affect our continuity system? What are
the pros and cons of changing our assessment system? If we change
our assessment tool, how will that impact programs that integrate
the E-LAP/LAP into their curriculum framework?
ECMHSP has established a Child Assessment
Committee composed of ECMHSP, delegate agency, and center staff to
address these and other issues and questions. This article provides
background information about ECMHSP, describes work the committee
has accomplished, and explains the questions and issues under
discussion.
Who We Are
ECMHSP was established in 1974 to provide
continuity of Head Start services to the children of migrant farm
workers and their families along the East Coast of the United
States. It has evolved over the years from a small, two-center
program in Florida, to a multi-state, multi-agency, multi-center
operation. Currently, ECMHSP contracts with 20 delegate agencies in
12 states (AL, DE, FL, GA, ME, MD, NC, NJ, NY, PA, SC, and VA).
There are a total of 88 centers serving over 8,000 infants,
toddlers, and preschoolers in full-day programs.
The majority of ECMHSP children and families are
Spanish-speaking families from Mexico, Texas, and Puerto Rico.
ECMHSP programs also serve children and families from Haiti,
Guatemala, Canada (Mixtec Indians who cross the Canadian border into
Maine and work in the blueberry barrens), and the United States.
Programs seek staff members who speak the
children's languages. Parents often are hired as teacher's aides for
this reason. Many of the families live in Florida from October
through May and travel up-stream after the agricultural season is
over to work in northern states. Centers open and close with the
comings and goings of migrant families, rather than operating on a
school year schedule. Thus, ECMHSP programs share children as their
families move from place to place to do agricultural work. Many of
the children come into Head Start as infants and stay within the
ECMHSP system until they transition into kindergarten.
What We Do: Screening
and Assessment
Within this context, ECMHSP has developed and
implemented a screening/assessment system to provide:
- Important information about children's
competencies and skill development;
- Opportunities for family involvement and input;
- Information for use by classroom teachers in
individualizing learning activities and creating classroom lesson
plans; and
- A communication and continuity link between all
the centers in the ECMHSP system (for E-LAP/LAP).
All children are screened within the first two
weeks of enrollment using the Denver II instrument. The first
E-LAP/LAP assessment is completed in the next month. The results,
along with family input, are used to create individual Child
Activity Plans (CAPs) for infants, toddlers, or preschoolers.
The CAP identifies learning objectives and related
classroom activities in the following areas of development (similar
to the Domains in the Head Start Outcomes Framework): language,
cognitive, gross motor, fine motor, pre-writing (only in the LAP),
social-emotional, and self-help. Information from the CAPs is used
to develop lesson plans for toddler and preschool classrooms.
E-LAPs/LAPs are updated monthly, as are the children's CAPs.
Programs that are open for eight weeks or less only use Denver II
screenings.
ECMHSP uses the E-LAP/LAP as a key part of its
communication and continuity system. Classroom teachers assess each
child each month and record the information on two identical
E-LAP/LAP forms. One copy is provided to families when they inform
the center they are leaving; the other goes in the child's records
folder, which contains education, health, and family information.
Children's records are sent back to the ECMHSP
main office when they leave a center. When families come to the next
ECMHSP center, they give their child's E-LAP/LAP form to the
classroom teachers. The center also requests the child's records
from the ECMHSP main office. This information helps teachers at the
new center, as they continue the assessment process and monthly
updates. Thus, the E-LAP/LAP form is a communication tool that
allows centers to provide continuity of education services as
children move.
ECMHSP chose to use the Denver II screening a
number of years ago because it met important criteria. It is useful
because:
- Hispanic children are included in the
re-standardization;
- It is a recognized screening tool;
- There are English and Spanish versions;
- Training resources are locally available to
centers;
- It covers children with ages ranging from birth
to six years; and
- It can be administered by paraprofessionals.
ECMHSP chose to use the E-LAP/LAP for ongoing
child assessment for many of the same reasons. There are English and
Spanish versions, it can be administered by paraprofessionals, it
includes children with ages ranging from birth to six years, and it
is a recognized assessment tool. Both the Denver II and E-LAP/LAP
are relatively easy to administer once staff understand the purpose
of the tools, the information they provide, and the mechanics of
administration.
With such a long-standing and integrated
systemwide screening and assessment process in place, reviewing our
assessment tool/process to consider change could be a daunting task!
However, ECMHSP looks at it as a chance to strengthen our assessment
system, reinforce the connections between assessment and curriculum,
and measure more accurately children's progress towards established
goals and outcomes.
Where We Are
The ECMHSP Child Assessment team has established a
course of action. They are gathering information on commercial
assessment tools, reviewing Head Start materials on child outcomes,
program performance measures and program self-assessment, and
establishing criteria and indicators for evaluating assessment
tools.
The last activity has entailed quite a bit of
discussion to flesh out the indicators for each criterion. So far,
our global criteria include staff and training, cost, age-range,
play-based, correlation with curriculum, and correlation with the
Head Start child outcomes.
One of the criteria - the need to be culturally
and linguistically appropriate - requires thoughtful consideration.
We ask ourselves, "What do we mean by culturally and linguistically
appropriate? How do we determine whether or not an assessment tool
is culturally and linguistically appropriate?"
Since all assessment tools and assessment
developers are influenced by culture, no assessment is entirely free
of bias. Assessment tools measure what is thought to be important to
the developer and to the society at large. For example, mainstream
American society values competencies in reading and writing. Thus
many assessments emphasize related cognitive and fine motor skills.
Other cultures value oral traditions and interpersonal relationship
skills. Because our programs serve children from diverse cultural
and linguistic backgrounds, we have developed the following
indicators and questions. These preliminary indicators may be
refined as we apply them:
- Pilot/standardization
studies. Was the assessment tool piloted with children
similar to our population of children?
- Availability of tool in
other languages. Is the tool available in Spanish? Other
languages? If yes, is it a direct translation from the English, or
is it an adapted translation (i.e., items assess information
similar to the English version, but use words, pictures, and
concepts that are culturally familiar and relevant to Latino or
other cultures)?
- Protocol for item
administration and interpretation of responses. Do
assessors have flexibility in administering items? If a child
gives a correct answer, but in his/her home language, is that
response acceptable? What kind of latitude do assessors have in
interpreting children's responses? Do assessors have to use a
prescribed kit of assessment materials, or can they use materials
familiar to the children?
Where We Are
Going
The Child Assessment Team is ready to begin the
work of evaluating selected assessment tools using our criteria and
indicators. Since our programs already use the LAP, we will begin
with that tool. This will also entail correlating the LAP with The
Creative Curriculum used by many migrant programs.
Once the committee has evaluated all the
assessment tools, ECMHSP senior management staff will review the
information and make an informed decision. They will take into
account the impact of any change on our established continuity
system, staff training issues, the integration of assessment and
curriculum, and measurement of child outcomes as mandated by Head
Start.
This is an exciting time for ECMHSP. Our system
review undoubtedly will have a profound effect on the educational
services we provide. While we already know a great deal about
children's developmental and educational status, this work will help
us know better where we want our children to go and how to tell when
they get there. This is a golden opportunity to create and deliver
an even stronger, sounder educational experience for young children
- one that will prepare them to become lifelong, successful
learners.
Jan Greenberg is the
Training and Development Associate at ECMHSP. T: 703-243-7522; E:
greenberg@ecmhsp.org.
The following ECMHSP
staff contributed to the article: Leila Arjona, Clara Cappiello,
Grace Horsman, and Kim Stacy.