Join The Foundation for Child Development for a three-part webinar summer series highlighting key takeaways from their new publication, Getting it Right: Using Implementation Research to Improve Outcomes in Early Care and Education. All three webinars will include a live Q&A session.
This publication provides insights into the value of including implementation research in the study of early care and education (ECE) interventions and research’s potential to improve programs and policies and achieve stronger outcomes for all young children. Learn more.
Webinars
Part 1: What more do we need to know about high-quality ECE programs?
This event has passed. A recording of the event is available below.
Featured presenters will explore what more is needed to know in order to implement high-quality ECE programs that achieve stronger outcomes for young children.
The discussion will focus on what instructional content and strategies promote children’s learning, how professional development and on-going learning can contribute to improved practice, and how learning environments can better support dual language learners. The conversation will also delve into challenges and opportunities in building and scaling high-quality ECE programs to meet the needs of young children.
Featured Presenters:
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Linda Espinosa, University of Missouri-Columbia
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Dale Farran, Vanderbilt University
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Jacqueline Jones, Foundation for Child Development
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Robert Pianta, University of Virginia
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Jason Sachs, Boston Public Schools
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Discussant: Ellen Frede, National Institute for Early Education Research
Part 2: Implementation research in early care and education
This event has passed. A recording of the event is available below.
Early care and education (ECE) programs do not follow a single program model. Understanding program purpose, context, setting, and the surrounding conditions all contribute to our understanding of how programs, practices, and policies vary in implementation. The conversation will examine several implementation research frameworks and approaches, highlight the contribution of qualitative research, and underscore the importance of equity-focused implementation research. Through implementation research, we can learn about how and why a program works, under what conditions, and for whom.
In this webinar, presenters will highlight key takeaways from the publication as it attempts to answer several questions for the field. What can we learn from implementation research principles to lead ECE programs, practices, and policies to better outcomes for young children? How can various implementation research designs address questions relevant to the field? How is improvement science different from implementation science? How are qualitative studies helping us understand variation across sites and localities implementing evidence-based programs? How can equity-focused implementation research be an effective tool for removing bias from evaluations?
Featured Presenters:
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Tamara Halle, Child Trends
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JoAnn Hsueh, MDRC
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Milagros Nores, National Institute for Early Education Research
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Sharon Ryan, Rutgers University
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Sara Vecchiotti, Foundation for Child Development
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Discussant: Caroline Ebanks, Institute of Education Sciences
Part 3: Moving towards equity through implementation research
This event has passed. A recording of the event is available below.
Now, more than ever, researchers, practitioners, and policymakers are thinking about the importance of equity in early care and education programs, policies, and practice. Essential conversation continues about how the influence of racism, discrimination, and poverty shapes ECE. Conducting implementation research with an equity perspective helps define opportunities for equity, identify inequities that may impact outcomes, and ensures that the research itself does not introduce biases or perpetuate inequities.
Hear insights about how equity-focused ECE research attempts to address the needs of children from diverse racial/ethnic, socioeconomic, cultural, and linguistic backgrounds. In this webinar, the following questions will be addressed: What strategies does an equity-focused implementation research study employ across various stages of research? How can a Social Determinants of Early Learning framework be used to guide researchers in addressing systemic inequities? How can ECE programs foster early bilingualism while improving outcomes for children? What can we learn from the Boston Public Schools’ experience in moving towards achieving equitable outcomes?
Featured Presenters:
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Linda Espinosa, University of Missouri-Columbia
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Iheoma U. Iruka, HighScope Educational Research Foundation
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Jacqueline Jones, Foundation for Child Development
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Milagros Nores, National Institute for Early Education Research
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Jason Sachs, Boston Public Schools (TBC)
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Discussant: Kristine Andrews, Child Trends