Browse the Collection
|
|
Current Filters: Author:Grobe, Deana [remove];
120 results found.|
Select Citation
|
Result | Resource Type |
|
|
|
|
2000 Oregon child care market rate study A study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the State of Oregon in 2000 |
Reports & Papers |
|
|
|
|
2000 Oregon child care market rate study [Executive summary] The summary of findings from a study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the State of Oregon in 2000 |
Executive Summary |
|
|
|
|
2002 Oregon child care market rate study A study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the State of Oregon in 2002 |
Reports & Papers |
|
|
|
|
2002 Oregon child care market rate study [Executive Summary] The summary of findings from a study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the State of Oregon in 2002 |
Executive Summary |
|
|
|
|
2004 Oregon child care market rate study A study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the State of Oregon in 2004 |
Reports & Papers
|
|
|
|
|
2004 Oregon child care market rate study [Executive summary] The summary of findings from a study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the State of Oregon in 2004 |
Executive Summary
|
|
|
|
|
2006 Oregon child care market rate study A study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the state of Oregon in 2006 |
Reports & Papers |
|
|
|
|
2006 Oregon child care market rate study [Executive summary] A summary of a study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the state of Oregon in 2006 |
Executive Summary |
|
|
|
|
2008 Oregon child care market price study A study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the state of Oregon by provider type and age of child in 2008 |
Reports & Papers |
|
|
|
|
2008 Oregon child care market price study [Executive summary] A summary of a study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the state of Oregon by provider type and age of child in 2008 |
Executive Summary |
|
|
|
|
2010 Oregon child care market price study A study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the state of Oregon in 2010 by provider type and age of child |
Reports & Papers |
|
|
|
|
2010 Oregon child care market price study [Executive summary] A summary of a study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the state of Oregon in 2010 by provider type and age of child |
Executive Summary |
|
|
|
|
2012 Oregon child care market price study A study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the state of Oregon in 2012 by provider type and age of child, based on data from a statewide child care resource and referral database for 3,511 family child care facilities, 861 child care centers, and 552 certified family child care facilities |
Reports & Papers |
|
|
|
|
2012 Oregon child care market price study [Executive summary] A summary of a study of child care market rates and their geographic distribution across the state of Oregon in 2012 by provider type and age of child, based on data from a statewide child care resource and referral database for 3,511 family child care facilities, 861 child care centers, and 552 certified family child care facilities |
Executive Summary |
|
|
|
|
Alternative methods for Minnesota's market rate study of child care prices A proposal of changes to the design and data collection methods used in market rate studies of child care prices conducted by Minnesota, including a discussion on the treatment of geographic locations, price modes and conversions, school-aged care, and non-standard hour care |
Reports & Papers |
|
|
|
|
Alternative methods for Minnesota’s market rate study of child care prices [Executive summary] A summary of a proposal of changes to the design and data collection methods used in market rate studies of child care prices conducted by Minnesota, including a discussion on the treatment of geographic locations, price modes and conversions, school-aged care, and non-standard hour care |
Executive Summary |
|
|
|
|
Alternative methods for Minnesota's market rate study of child care prices: Technical appendices An appendix to a proposal of changes to the design and data collection methods used in market rate studies of child care prices conducted by Minnesota, including a discussion on the treatment of geographic locations, price modes and conversions, school-aged care, and non-standard hour care |
Other |
|
|
|
|
Child Care Market Rate Survey Practices and Policies of States, Territories and Tribes, 2005-2006 The primary objective of this study was to describe current market rate survey methods, practices, and policies in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, five territories, and the 28 tribes that conduct their own market rate survey. A market rate survey is a tool to collect up-to-date information on what facilities, within given geographic areas, charge parents for various types of child care. A second objective was to identify the validity issues that emerge from this comparison of current market rate survey practices. Variables are organized under six specific functions representing the market rate survey process. These were: (1) administration/organization of the market rate survey, (2) facility population and sample, (3) data collection, (4) data analysis, (5) dissemination of the results and (6) rate setting policy. |
Data Sets
|
|
|
|
|
Child Care Market Rate Survey Project: Mail Survey of Oregon Facilities, 2006 This survey was one strategy used to collect child care market price data. Comparing findings garnered from different methods allows one to evaluate whether different data collection methods produce different price findings (convergent validity) and how well these data collection methods represent the child care market (criterion-related validity). These data can also be used to explore several validity issues of concern with market price studies. The major areas of investigation in this survey include child care prices by type of care, geographic location, and price mode (hourly, daily, weekly, monthly). Other areas of investigation include capacity by age group, additional fees facilities charge, whether they care for subsidized children, and what affects the prices that they charge parents. |
Data Sets
|
|
|
|
|
Child Care Market Rate Survey Project: Oregon Resource and Referral Administrative Data Update, 2006 This survey was one strategy used to collect child care market price data. Comparing findings garnered from different methods allows one to evaluate whether different data collection methods produce different price findings (convergent validity) and how well these data collection methods represent the child care market (criterion-related validity). These data can also be used to explore several validity issues of concern with market price studies. The major areas of investigation in this survey include child care prices by type of care, geographic location, and price mode (hourly, daily, weekly, monthly). Other areas of investigation include capacity by age group, additional fees facilities charge, whether they care for subsidized children, and what affects the prices that they charge parents. |
Data Sets
|
|
|
|
|
Child Care Market Rate Survey Project: Telephone Survey of Oregon Facilities, 2006 This survey was one strategy used to collect child care market price data. Comparing findings garnered from different methods allows one to evaluate whether different data collection methods produce different price findings (convergent validity) and how well these data collection methods represent the child care market (criterion-related validity). These data can also be used to explore several validity issues of concern with market price studies. The major areas of investigation in this survey include child care prices by type of care, geographic location, and price mode (hourly, daily, weekly, monthly). Other areas of investigation include capacity by age group, additional fees facilities charge, whether they care for subsidized children, and what affects the prices that they charge parents. |
Data Sets
|
|
|
|
|
Child care subsidies and child care markets: Evidence from three states A study of the relationship of economic, demographic, and policy variables--with a focus on the influence of child care subsidy expenditures--to child care market prices in Oregon, based on an analysis of longitudinal county-level data, and a comparison of results from Oregon to the results of similar studies from California and Minnesota |
Reports & Papers |
|
|
|
|
Child care subsidies and child care markets: Evidence from three states [Executive summary] A summary of a study of the relationship of economic, demographic, and policy variables--with a focus on the influence of child care subsidy expenditures--to child care market prices in Oregon, based on an analysis of longitudinal county-level data, and a comparison of results from Oregon to the results of similar studies from California and Minnesota |
Executive Summary |
|
|
|
|
Common challenges in the study of continuity of child care subsidy participation: CCPRC subsidy workgroup methodology research brief series A discussion of issues in designing studies of the dynamics of child care subsidy receipt |
Methods |
|
|
|
|
Fluctuation in Child Care Cost Burden: The Effect of Increasing Subsidy Policy Generosity on Parent Decision Making This study uses secondary analysis of administrative data to examine the amount of variability in the parent share of child care cost experienced by participants in the subsidy program and the effect of cost burden variation on decisions related to continuation in the program and type of care selected. Substantial changes in Oregon child care subsidy policy in October 2007 provided the impetus for this study. Oregon went from having the least to having nearly the most generous subsidy policies in the country and this change provided an opportunity to examine how subsidy policy impacts families. Research questions include: (1) How predictable is the child care cost burden of a parent using a child care subsidy, as indicated by changes in copay, hours authorized, hours billed, and payments made to providers?; (2) To what extent did the 2007 policy change affect the amount of financial assistance and the predictability of parent cost burden associated with the subsidy program?; and (3) To what extent are the October 2007 policy changes associated with changes in type of care and stability of subsidy use? |
Administration for Children and Families/OPRE Projects
|
|
Select Citation
|


Peer Reviewed Journal