IBHE to use $1.3M to improve early
childhood education
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[May 14, 2020]
Knowing that effective, skilled, and diverse early
childhood educators are a lynchpin to classroom quality, Gov. JB
Pritzker has awarded the Illinois Board of Higher Education (IBHE)
$1.3 million in grants to strengthen the early childhood workforce.
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The funding comes from a $13.4 million grant to
Illinois from the federal Preschool Development Birth to Five
Renewal Grant.
Funds will be used by colleges and universities to help early
educators attain a credential or degree. That could mean providing
supports such as tailored advising and mentoring, job-embedded
coaching, access to technology, transportation, childcare, and
supports for course and other administrative and instructional fees.
Illinois has a history of institution-led programs of tailored
supports for early childhood educators, and evaluations have
demonstrated that they can be helpful for current early childhood
educators pursuing degrees or credentials to improve their practice.
“We want to see more early educators gain credentials in order to
improve access to high quality early childhood education for
families across the state,” said Illinois Board of Higher Education
Executive Director Ginger Ostro. “And we need to make sure that
early childhood workers—particularly those who are minorities and
low-income—have the resources necessary to succeed. This grant will
help open up opportunities for early childhood workers throughout
the state.”
Dr. Jamilah R. Jor’dan, Acting Executive Director of
the Governor’s Office of Early Childhood Development (GOECD), said,
“These cohorts represent a scaling up of Illinois’ efforts to
support early childhood professionals in attaining additional
degrees and credentials and strengthening their practice.
Responsive, personalized cohorts provide current educators with the
tools they need to be successful in pursuing further education,
which can pay dividends for themselves and their families, the
children and families they serve, as well as their communities.”
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According to the Illinois Career Information System and Illinois
Department of Employment Security, the need for well-prepared teachers is
expected to grow by nearly 10 percent in the next six years.
IBHE is now looking for proposals from Illinois community colleges and four-year
institutions that plan to support groups of early childhood educators next
academic year as they pursue an Illinois Gateways credential or degree. For more
information about how to apply for the grant, go to ibhe.org/IBHE-EC4.html.
This publication was made possible by Grant Number 90TP0057-01 from the Office
of Child Care, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services. Its contents are solely the responsibility of the
authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Office of
Child Care, the Administration for Children and Families, or the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services.
[Illinois Office of Communication and
Information]
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