Shayna Cook
Policy Analyst, Early & Elementary Education
Today, young children have access to more technology than聽ever, and families of almost all socio-economic backgrounds are making smartphones and other internet-enabled devices part of their daily lives.Many early education programs around the country are beginning to determine how they might harness these tools to engage with parents, improve home-to-school connections, and otherwise augment efforts to help children develop early language and literacy skills.
Last week,聽聽and the聽at Sesame Workshop launched an聽showing where these programs are located, how they are going about their work, and what evidence of impact they are able to share. 聽We presented the map (see image below), which is still 鈥渋n beta,鈥 at CGI America, an annual meeting of the Clinton Global Initiative, in Denver last week. The map provides a birds鈥 eye view of innovation around the country, and is designed to enable users to sort initiatives by type of program, technological tool, evidence of impact, age of children served, and more. Clicking on the pindrops for each program opens a new page with a profile of the program including narratives, submitted by the programs, on how they got started and why.
We have named this mapping project, and are already hearing positive feedback from state and program leaders who have been testing new approaches and need to be able to see the landscape and find examples with a solid research base. 聽We encourage you to click around and take a look as we improve the map and profiles over the summer and let us know what you think. This data collection, which, has now been re-opened and our teams will be adding information to the map on a rolling basis through the end of September. 聽If you represent a program that you think should be included in our database, please.
Please note: This map does not attempt to categorize products, such as websites, curated collections, subscription-based online libraries, apps, or ebooks. We are focusing instead on interventions, pilot initiatives, programs and other activities pursued by educators and community leaders.
The beta version is supported by , a catalyst for bringing state, national, and funding partners together to improve state policies for children, starting at birth and continuing through age eight, and by the Pritzker Children鈥檚 Initiative. The project was born in an working group meeting at CGI America in 2014, was announced during and was at the White House Summit on Early Learning last year.
The 滨苍罢贰尝听map is a part of a larger data platform called Atlas, which is being developed by 麻豆果冻传媒’s Education Program. It will house different data visualizations, maps, and other interactive displays of our research and policy analysis. A beta version of the platform was published in June 2015.
Stay tuned for more information about an official release of the InTEL map and an overview of its findings this fall.”