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Current Filters: Author:Tester, Diana [remove];

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Administrative data as children's well-being indicators: The South Carolina Data Bridge Project
Lavenda, Osnat, July, 2011
Child Indicators Research, 4(3), 439-451

An account of the South Carolina Data Bridge Project's compilation and analysis of census tract and county administrative data from multiple governmental sources to inform the creation, implementation, finance allocation, and monitoring of quality-related child care policies and regulations, and a demonstration of its use in an initiative to implement and monitor the uptake of a sanitation regulation throughout the state

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New data on child care subsidy programs
Spears, John, August, 2012
Policy & Practice, 70(4), 18-21

An identification of challenges and successes regarding the use of administrative child care subsidy data for policy analysis, with examples from South Carolina, Virginia, and Maryland

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South Carolina Child Care State Research Capacity Building Project
Bolick, Leigh, 2007
South Carolina. Department of Social Services

The main purposes of the project are multifold, but include the following: (1) leveraging data resources by enhancing South Carolina's Data Warehouse with additional administrative childcare focused files; and (2) building research capacity to better track South Carolina's children and their families who use childcare subsidies and other services. Specific project objectives are to: (1) create new and/or improved administrative data with the capacity to integrate or link with the SC Integrated Human Services Data Warehouse; (2) Develop web-based tools to access linked data sets from multiple service providers capturing key data on families, children and child care service providers; and (3) Investigate the impact of the CCDF on improving the quality of child care available to and utilized by low-income working parents and families who are at risk.

Administration for Children and Families/OPRE Projects


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Research Connections is supported by grant #90YE0104 from the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, Administration for Children and Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The contents are solely the responsibility of the National Center for Children in Poverty and the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research and do not necessarily represent the official views of the Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation, the Administration for Children and Families, or the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

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