NCASE Resource Library
Reset Selections
Topics
- Culturally Responsive Practice & Inclusion (102) Apply Culturally Responsive Practice & Inclusion filter
- Family and Community Engagement (44) Apply Family and Community Engagement filter
- Professional Development (67) Apply Professional Development filter
- Program Design and Management (61) Apply Program Design and Management filter
- Quality Improvement (55) Apply Quality Improvement filter
- School & Community Partnerships (33) Apply School & Community Partnerships filter
- Subsidy, Eligibility, and Equal Access (41) Apply Subsidy, Eligibility, and Equal Access filter
- Supportive Learning Environment (100) Apply Supportive Learning Environment filter
- Systems Building (86) Apply Systems Building filter
Resource type
Publisher
- Administration for Children & Families (ACF) (3) Apply Administration for Children & Families (ACF) filter
- Afterschool Matters Journal (1) Apply Afterschool Matters Journal filter
- Child Trends (1) Apply Child Trends filter
- National Afterschool Association (NAA) (1) Apply National Afterschool Association (NAA) filter
- National Institute on Out-of-School Time (NIOST) (1) Apply National Institute on Out-of-School Time (NIOST) filter
- National Summer Learning Association (NSLA) (2) Apply National Summer Learning Association (NSLA) filter
- National Women's Law Center (1) Apply National Women's Law Center filter
- Office of Child Care (OCC) (4) Apply Office of Child Care (OCC) filter
- Other (11) Apply Other filter
- The Wallace Foundation (2) Apply The Wallace Foundation filter
- US Department of Education (1) Apply US Department of Education filter
Search Results
Filter By
During the school year, children in both affluent and historically marginalized student groups benefit from learning resources that are available due to access to public education.
Given the prominence of the child care licensing system, it is important to determine how it can be more equitable on behalf of the providers, and the children and families it serves. This issue brief provides questions for licensing administrators and their staff to help identify and consider inequities in the licensing systems.
This webpage from the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) is focused on the new COVID-19 vaccination recommendation for children aged 5 and older. It provides information on why getting children vaccinated is important, links to help families find vaccines, and data on vaccine safety.
These tools offer individuals the ability to look at U.S. data in specific locales to identify particular communities that will need continued support in recovery. It looks at 15 social factors organized into four themes: (1) socio-economic status, (2) household composition, (3) race/ethnicity/language, and (4) housing/transportation.
This report summarizes research on changes in licensing requirements and policies for child care centers, family child care homes, and group care homes. It compares 2017 data to that of 2014.
This slide show provides a summary of what parents, teachers, and Out-of-School Time (OST) providers want in summer programs for 2021 based on a combination of focus groups, interviews, and 3,031 surveys. Results indicate that parents want summer programs to prioritize their children’s social and emotional health.
This issue brief shares data from the Census Bureau Household Pulse Survey that indicate that 19% of Hispanic households and 22% of Black households were food insufficient this summer compared to 14% of all households and 9% of white households. Food insufficiency puts children at higher risk of health, academic, behavioral, and emotional problems.
There are four issue briefs as part of Reviewing State Policies series: (1) Supporting Financial Stability for Providers; (2) Child Care Ratios and Class Sizes; (3) Protecting Health and Safety; and (4) Support for Families. Each brief provides an overview about state policies emerging during this time of COVID-19, with multiple state policy examples that other states can learn from.
This issue brief provides recommendations for how to best support home-based child care providers during COVID-19, recognizing that this is an especially important part of the supply right now, and was already seeing instability and a decline in providers.
This updated guidance from the CDC includes important information on layered prevention strategies for 2021-2022 while younger children are still not able to be vaccinated. There is information on strategies such as promoting vaccination, mask use, ventilation, social distancing. There are links to state and local information about community spread and vaccination rates.