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Characteristics of Children Served in Part C. Kathy Hebbeler SRI International February 17, 2010. Objectives. Share some information on what we know about children and families receiving Part C services
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Characteristics of Children Served in Part C Kathy Hebbeler SRI International February 17, 2010
Objectives Share some information on what we know about children and families receiving Part C services Discuss the implications for child find, eligibility criteria and improving systems and services
Data Sources • National Early Intervention Longitudinal Study (NEILS) (www.sri.com/neils) • Data States report annually to the U.S. Department of Education (www.ideadata.org) • Patterns in the Identification of and Outcomes for Children and Youth With Disabilities (http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/pubs/20104005/index.asp)
NEILS Followed 3,338 children and families from entry to early intervention through kindergarten Families entered EI in 1997-1998 Nationally representative study with data weighted to represent the nation (but the nation in 1998) Data collected shortly after family enrolled in EI Service providers --Study enrollment form Families – Telephone Interview
State Reported Data All states submit data annually to Office of Special Education Programs in the U.S. Department of Education Provides perspective on change over time Not much detail on characteristics of children and families being served.
Number of children has increased Note: This is a one day count. Number served in a year is higher
Percentage of children served nationally, and in by state (1997, 1998–2005 average, and 2006) (IES Report)
Percentage of children ages birth through 2, by OSEP categorization of eligibility criteria (2006 data) National Average (IES Report)
More boys than girls NEILS found 61% boys - 1998
Proportionately more White and American Indian/Alaskan Native Children are served
Percentage of Infants & Toddlers Entering Services by Age at Entry * * Age at development of the Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP).
Reasons for Eligibility for EI: 0 to < 12 months
Reasons for Eligibility for EI: 12 to < 24 months Reasons for Eligibility for EI: 12 to <24 Months
Reasons for Eligibility for EI: 24 to 36 months
Average Age for Events Leading to Beginning Early Intervention
Over 1/3 children in EI are low birth weight *Source: Bloom and Tonthat (2002).
EI serving only a fraction of low birth weight babies in US • 22% began EI after 12 months; 8% between 24 and 30 months (NEILS) • According to CDC, in 2002: • 314,077 LBW births occurred (7.8% of all births) • 58,544 of these were VLBW (1.46% of all births). • 39,000 children younger than age 1 were being served in EI in December 2002
Health Status at Entry to EI *Source: Bloom and Tonthat (2002).
Household Characteristics 91% live with biological/adoptive mother. 69% live with biological/adoptive father. 7% are in foster care. 16% live in single parent households. 43% have household incomes less than $25,000. 20% have another child with special needs in the household.
Issues to Ponder • Differences across states in percent served • Differences by race/ethnicity • Growth over time in the 2 to 3 year olds • Timeline to IFSP • Services to low birth babies