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PowerPoint
Presentations
Shared
Services Strategy For Child Care Centers
Soller, P. (2004) Powerpoint presentation on what the early childhood
field can learn from the private sector about marketing shared services.
Strengths
of a Collective Management Approach
Powerpoint presentation at the Region I Child Care Conference in 2004
by Sheila Balboni, Executive Director of Community Partners Inc. in Lawrence,
Massachusetts. Community Partners serves approximately 900 children a
day in 7 center-based sites and a network of family child care homes.
An additional 300 children are enrolled in a charter school operated by
Community Partners. All sites share the same administration. Community
Partners also includes a division that provides support services to child
care programs throughout the region.
Investing
in Child Care: Why Employers Should Support Publicly-Funded Child Care
- This powerpoint presentation, developed by Louise Stoney for an American
Business Collaboration webcast in February, 2003, discusses why employers
should work with government to establish and finance early care and education
services. (New)
Financing
Strategies: Where Do We Go From Here? - This powerpoint presentation
was used by Anne Mitchell and Louise Stoney at the State Child Care Administrators
Meeting in Washington, DC in August, 2003. It summarizes lessons from
the early childhood finance reform learning community. (New)
Child
Care Funding: The Story Since 1966
This presentation given by Mark Greenberg, Jennifer Mezey, and Rachel
Schumacher of the Center for Law and Social Policy on March 5, 2003.
Winning
With Business
Shelley Symonds and Shari Simon, two California business women, were instrumental
in getting employer allies in the California campaign for paid leave.
This presentation contains their recommendations
for organizing business support and a packet
of sample employer outreach materials that Shelley put together.
Early
Care and Education Finance Reform: Practice, Reality and Action
This PowerPoint presentation was prepared by Anne Mitchell and Louise
Stoney for the 2003 National Smart Start Preconference and focuses on
such key questions as what are we financing, how are we financing it,
what's wrong with how we finance it now, and what are the principles for
change in the current system.
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