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1. New Hampshire Children’s Trust, Inc. “Investment in Prevention”Applicant Workshop Casey Family Services
June 18, 2010
Becky Berk, M.Ed.
Technical Assistance and Evaluation Director
Keryn Bernard-Kriegl, MS
Executive Director
3. Objectives of this Workshop Participants will:
Become more familiar with the NH Children’s Trust and our role as your partner in the prevention of child abuse and neglect
Understand the “Investment in Prevention” philosophy, guidelines and process of the NH Children’s Trust, including changes from last year’s process.
Be better equipped to prepare successful proposals for NHCTF and/or other funders.
Know how to access training and technical assistance opportunities.
Understand expectations of award recipients, including survey administration or program evaluation.
4. Overview of the NH Children’s Trust Fund
5. About the NH Children’s Trust Fund Legislatively created, 1987
RSA 169-c:39
Designated as the lead agency in NH for child abuse prevention
Braided funding sources
CAPTA Title II
Endowment
Charitable contributions
Public/Private partnership model
Reorganized as a new 501(c)3 agency in 2010 – NH Children’s Trust Inc.
6. New Hampshire Children’s Trust Fundwww.nhctf.org NH’s lead agency to create and implement statewide child abuse and neglect prevention plan
Funds, supports, and evaluates community-based child abuse prevention programs across the state
Leverages local funds to maximize federal dollars for NH prevention efforts
Provides technical assistance and training
Provides parent advocacy/leadership and engagement services
Sponsors special programs and initiatives
7. Mission and Vision Vision
Every New Hampshire child will thrive in safe, stable and nurturing families and communities.
Mission
To prevent child abuse and neglect in NH
As one strategy toward this mission, the NH Children’s Trust funds, supports, and evaluates community-based family support programs across the Granite state. We are the CAPTA Title II lead agency for child abuse prevention and this year we have 48 grantees across the stateWe are the CAPTA Title II lead agency for child abuse prevention and this year we have 48 grantees across the state
8. Funding our Mission
10. Collectively We Work Across Multiple Levels
11. Objectives of funding as a strategy
14. We provide funding, but…. We are not a foundation
We are not a traditional funder
We implement various strategies (of which funding direct services is one) to end child abuse and neglect in New Hampshire.
We are beginning an assessment of the best use of our resources toward this goal.
We need your help in this planning!
16. Training and TA Available through NHCTF Protective Factors
Recognizing and Reporting Child Abuse and Neglect
Program Design, including logic models, evidence-based programs and evaluation
Parent Engagement and Advocacy
Data Management and DBDM
Survey Administration
Positive Behavior Support
We can provide or help organize trainings and TA on many other topics – please contact us!
17. Other Resources for Training United Ways of New Hampshire,
Health and Human Services Committee on Organizational Learning (COOL),
DCYF and its Bureaus,
NH Center for Nonprofits,
NH Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Abuse,
NH Child Care Resource and Referral Network,
National Alliance for the Mentally Ill - NH,
NH Family Voices
New Hampshire Training Institute on Addictive Disorders
Community Action Programs (CAP agencies)
Others?
18. Focus on Parents and Caregivers
19. Parental/Caregiver Influence on Children Children are affected by
Who parents/caregivers are (education, socioeconomic, temperament)
What parents/caregivers know (about normal child development)
What parents/caregivers believe (attitudes towards childrearing)
What parents/caregivers expect (of behavior and achievement)
What parents/caregivers face (challenges in daily life)
What parents/caregivers do (parenting practices)
22. Increase Protective Factors
23. 5 Protective Factorsidentified through research by *CSSP to prevent child abuse and neglect Parental Resilience
Social Connections
Knowledge of Parenting and Child Development
Concrete Support in Times of Need
Social & Emotional Competence
of Children
*CSSP is Center for the Study of Social Policy
24. Parental Resilience The ability to cope and bounce back from all types of challenges Parental psychology plays an important role in both the cause and prevention of child abuse.
Parents who have experienced abuse and neglect themselves need caring relationships to help them develop and maintain positive relationships with their children.
Parents who are emotionally resilient are able to maintain a positive attitude, creatively solve problems, and effectively rise to challenges in their lives.
25. Isolation is a consistent risk factor in child abuse and neglect.
Social connections and friendships build parents’ network of others in the community whom they can call on for help solving problems.
Community norms against violence help reduce child abuse and neglect.
26. Knowledge of Parenting and Child Development 43% of parents believe that children can control their emotions by age three, and 20% expect this by age two.
However, child development research tells us that most children only develop the capacity to control their emotions (i.e. asking for help when frustrated rather than having a tantrum or biting) between the ages of 3-5.
Thus, parents may interpret the behavior of their toddlers as intentional and defiant rather than age-appropriate and normal for their developmental stage.
27. Concrete Support in Times of Need
28. Social & Emotional Competence of Children and Parental Nurturing & Bonding
29. 2010 “Investment in Prevention” Application Process
30. Programs Funded NHCTF has awarded funding for 22 years to family support, family strengthening and child abuse prevention programs statewide.
Some significant shifts in funding philosophy and application materials will occur in this funding cycle. We currently are funding 48 agenciesWe currently are funding 48 agencies
31. Changes in Process from Last Year One-year award, 10/1/2010 through 9/30/2011
Maximum award amount $10,000
100% of awards distributed 10/2010, pending CBCAP funds and signed agreements with recipient agencies
Any qualified agency may submit a proposal for one program, regardless of previous or current NHCT funding (removal of requirement to wait one year after two successive cycles.)
If an agency is receiving second half of NHCT funding in the 2009-2011 cycle, they are eligible to submit a proposal for a different program than that already being funded.
Progress reviews (on-site face-to-face meeting and structured conversation) held 5-6 months after initial funding; replaces the written progress report.
Final written report due October 31, 2011
32. Changes in Focus from Last Year Consideration of “contextual fit” with mission-driven family support and CAN prevention
Specific narrative question on protective factors
Increased emphasis on secondary prevention
Increased emphasis on evaluation planning
Fewer and more focused “sub-questions” in each narrative section
Preference for members of FSNH for applications otherwise equal
New section on assurances (programs understand the expectations of them if funded)
33. Section Review Cover Page
Proposal Narrative
Assurances
Budget Form
Audit
Additional Materials
Specific Tools
Logic Model
EB/EI worksheet
In-kind calculation worksheet
34. Cover Page Fiscal agent vs. applicant
Current FSNH member?
EB/EI Program Rating
Unduplicated, estimated participant numbers
35. Proposal Narrative Sections Organization Description
Description of Target Population and Need
Program Activities, Outcomes and Measures (Logic Model)
Protective Factors
Outreach to Program Participants
Program Resources
Evaluation
36. Proposal Review Process Be linear and follow the sequence of questions
Clearly identify which sections of text address each question
If you have other information you want the reviewers to know in a particular section, put it last in the section in its own paragraph.
37. Changes in Budget Format from Last Year Budget form reflects program, not agency/organization
Excel format (automatically sums across rows and down columns)
Column within Excel sheet for explanations of line items in lieu of a separate budget narrative
Continued requirement for 25% confirmed match (may be hard match, i.e. cash, grant or soft match, i.e. in-kind)
No more than 15% of request may be for administrative (non-direct-service-related) costs
38. Budget Form Excel format
Examples of categories
In-kind excel worksheet (optional)
39. Other Materials
40. Tips It might be the best program in the world, but if it’s not convincing as a child abuse prevention program…..
Be specific and very clear when explaining how your program builds protective factors
Emphasize the logic of how things tie together in your logic model
Use data to develop your case
Align your budget with your narrative and logic model
Keep the three C’s – clear, concise, compelling
Compare your final draft against the proposal narrative and the guidelines
41. Assurances Strengthening Families month – examples and non-examples of appropriate activities
Family Support Outcomes Survey
Intention/Purpose
Administration
Support and TA
Onsite progress review
Final written report
43. Types and Purposes of Data Quantitative Numerical
Answers the questions Who, What and How Many
Typical sources
Demographic summaries, external or internal to the program
Incident reports
Counts of events, people served, etc.
Disproportionality
Qualitative Descriptive
Answers the questions How and Why
Typical sources
Interviews & Focus groups
Observations
Case Summaries/Anecdotes
Counting and Sampling conditions and opinions
Document review
Staff debriefings
44. Family Support Outcomes Survey Retrospective Survey Tool
One point-in-time administration collects information on “before” and “today”
Quantitative & Qualitative
Collects demographic information, customer satisfaction and open-ended participant responses
Measuring Protective Factors
Eight key protective factors that the Children’s Bureau has identified to reduce the likelihood of child maltreatment
45. Family Support Outcomes Survey Survey Training
All administering staff & volunteers must have received the Family Support Outcomes Survey Training from NHCT before administering the survey.
Support From NHCTF
All original surveys will be sent to NHCT for inclusion in the statewide outcomes report
Statistics for Programs
NHCT will provide data entry and analysis
You will receive aggregate statistics for your program, raw data in Excel, and participant quotes in Microsoft Word
46. Family Support Participant Surveys Show Positive and Consistent Results in Building Protective Factors
47. A Sample Survey Report
48. Comparison of Protective Factors CSSP – Five Factors
Parental Resilience
Social Connections
Knowledge of Parenting and Child Development
Concrete Support in Times of Need
Social & Emotional Competence of Children
Family Support – Eight Factors Supportive Relationships
Accessing Resources
Parental Confidence
Sharing Parental Concerns
Meeting Family Needs
Standing Up for Family Needs
Reducing Family Stress
Nurturing and Attachment
49. Assessing evidence-based, evidence-informed programs and practices
50. Evidence-Based Practice Federal reporting requirements
Commitment to high-quality services for children and families
Ongoing commitment to evaluation and program improvement
51. Evidence-Based Practice Worksheet and Checklist Begin by researching the FRIENDS database
If not listed, work through the EB/EI worksheet
You must be able to answer Yes for every item to achieve a particular level
Need help? Contact NHCT!
Provide the resulting rating on the application cover sheet
55. Developing a Logic Model FRIENDS Logic Model Builder, especially good for suggesting language and for suggesting specific tools for measuring outcomes in participants
Many models for logic models exist!
For the desired outcome in the specified target population - if we use these resources (inputs) to conduct these activities (strategies) with these activity measures (outputs), we should see these results (outcomes) in our participants, as measured by this tool (outcome measure).
What assumptions are you making in the above model, and are they accurate?
56. Logic Model as Foundation Your work plan and timeline should align with your logic model
Your evaluation plan should align with your logic model
Your budget should align with your logic model
Sketch out your logic model first!
57. Timeline Deadline for Grant Application: August 20th, 5:00 pm
Decisions by NHCTF Trustees: September 13th
Notifications to Applicants: September 15th
Contracts are distributed, signed and returned to NHCT with required attachments
Fund Distribution: October 1st (depending on CBCAP fund availability)
On-site progress review – March-April 2011
Final Reports – Due October 15, 2011
58. Proposal Review Matrix
59. Nat’l Data Sources FRIENDS National Resource Center on Community Based Child Abuse Prevention
http://www.friendsnrc.org/index.htm
Adverse Childhood Experiences study
http://www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/ACE/
Substance Abuse and Child Abuse
http://www.cwla.org/articles/cv0109sacm.htm
Child Maltreatment report, 2008
http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/cb/pubs/cm08/index.htm
60. Child Trends
http://www.childtrends.org/index.cfm
Child Welfare League of America
http://www.cwla.org/
KidsCount Databook
http://www.childrennh.org/web/kidscount.html
Children’s Defense Fund
http://www.childrensdefense.org/
Critical Issues for Parents with Mental Illness
http://mentalhealth.samhsa.gov/publications/allpubs/KEN-01-0109/execsumm.asp
61. Center for the Study of Social Policy
http://www.cssp.org/
Data Resource Center for Child Health
http://www.childhealthdata.org/content/Default.aspx
Evaluating Prevention Programs
http://www.childwelfare.gov/preventing/evaluating/
Council for Children and Families (WA)
http://www.ccf.wa.gov/prevention-resources
Ounce of Prevention (early childhood)
http://www.ounceofprevention.org/about/whyinvestearly.php
62. Child Welfare Information Gateway
http://www.childwelfare.gov/index.cfm
National Family Preservation Network
http://www.nfpn.org/
National Center for Children in Poverty
http://www.nccp.org/
National Data Archive on Child Abuse and Neglect
http://www.ndacan.cornell.edu/
NH Health Web Reporting and Query System
http://www.nhhealthwrqs.org/
63. Questions? Becky Berk
Technical Assistance and Evaluation Director
NH Children’s Trust
10 Ferry Street, Suite 315
Concord, NH 03301
224-1279
bberk@nhctf.org
64. Work Time and Individual TA Optional