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The Impact of Child Care Center-Head Start Agency Partnership Characteristics on Parents’ Satisfaction with Child Care and Early Education

Title
The Impact of Child Care Center-Head Start Agency Partnership Characteristics on Parents’ Satisfaction with Child Care and Early Education
Author(s)

Kim, Jung-Eun

Keyword
Public-Private Partnership ; Child Care and Early Education ; Parent Satisfaction ; Hierarchical Linear Modeling ; 공공 민간 파트너쉽 ; 아동복지서비스 ; 영유아교육 ; 부모 만족도 ; 위계선형모형
Publication Year
2012-12-01
Publisher
Korea Institute for Health and Social Affairs
Citation
Health and Social Welfare Review Vol.32 No.4, pp.391-427
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to examine whether the public-private partnership influences the quality of programming at client level by applying the partnership example in early childhood development as seen in the child care center’s partnership with Head Start agency. Specific aim is to examine what characteristics of the Head Start partnership influence parent satisfaction with child care and early education. Key theories in an effort to understand the public-private partnerships in social services delivery have two main viewpoints: 1) economic perspectives to see the partnership as contracting and economic efficiency-based relationships, and 2) organizational and institutional perspective to explain the dynamic collaborative processes of the partnership. The data was drawn from Partnership Impact Research Project, 2001-2004, quantitative data gathered from child care directors, teachers, and parents in Ohio, U.S.A. This data was cleaned as cross-sectional basis and finalized 745 parents of 50 partnering child care centers. The research question was examined through the use of hierarchical linear modeling. This study revealed that partnership maturity is a significant predictor of higher parent satisfaction. The findings of this study support that higher parent satisfaction is more likely to depend on how the partnership has been characterized (process-driven partnership), rather than whether the centers have a partnership itself (financial resource dependent partnership). This study contributes new empirical knowledge throughout more direct evaluation of partnership factors at the organizational level as well as quality of programs at the client level. These empirical findings imply that the partnership between the child care centers and Head Start agencies need to further develop organizational strategies to support client-focused partnerships that effectively promote quality programs.
Table Of Contents
Ⅰ. Introduction
Ⅱ. Literature Review for Theoretical Development
Ⅲ. Methods
Ⅳ. Results
Ⅴ. Discussion and Implication
Reference
ISSN
1226-072X
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