- 健康醫療
- 兒童的書籍
- 兒童福利
- 學校和學齡兒童
- 托兒,幼兒照顧和教育
- 暴力防治
- 權益倡導與社區建設
- 父母和家庭
- Hands-on activities
- Parent activism on health
- Parent activism on poverty and welfare
- Parent and teacher action
- Parent involvement in child care
- 健康醫療
- 兒童受虐防治
- 兒童發展與家庭
- 兒童福利與家庭
- 受刑人的孩子
- 在學校的家長社會運動
- 在學校的家長社會運動
- 多元文化/多元化和家庭
- 嬰兒/幼兒
- 學齡的就學準備
- 家庭成員的關係
- 家庭支援成功!
- 家庭暴力
- 家長之聲
- 對托兒的家長社會運動
- 暴力防治
- 正面的親子教育/管教
- 父母和家庭的建議
- 特殊兒童
- 社交/情緒發展
- 社區資源/家庭支援
- 祖父母/年長者
- 移民家庭
- 貧窮/社會福利
- 達成使父母成為領導人的途徑
- 離婚
- 養育兒童
- 貧窮/收入/社會福利
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Member profile: Valentina Feldman: "We are the driving force"
- Member profile: Valentina Feldman: “We are the driving force”
- Universal preschool principles
- Speak out
Member profile: Valentina Feldman: “We are the driving force”
Long-time child care teacher Valentina Feldman joined the Corps after reading a brochure at a CAEYC conference. An immigrant from Russia, she works at San Francisco’s Holy Family Day Home. Though she is involved with CARES and the California Mentor-Teacher Program, she joined the Corps because teachers “make decisions and address issues. We are the driving force.” She participated the Corps’ 2003 and 2005 postcard campaigns to renew CARES funding.
Recently, it’s been universal preschool “on everyone’s mind,” she says. Feldman helped get Prop. 82 (see Proposition
82: Preschool for All) on the ballot by collecting signatures from co-workers. She’s concerned the initiative could create “learning standards that aren’t developmentally appropriate.” But she points to benefits for children—learning social-emotional skills and, for children learning English, more time to become English-proficient—and benefits for teachers—”higher education will improve our status and compensation.”
The Corps surveyed teachers and providers about Prop. 82 and preschool for all programs. Despite being “busy, involved in different agencies,” Feldman brought in nearly 100 surveys. She asked co-workers to fill them out during staff meetings, put some out for parents in her center’s drop-in area, and brought them to a mentor- teacher meeting and child de-velopment leadership retreat —events “I would attend anyway,” she says. She also sent forms to the San Francisco Child Care Providers Association and San Francisco CARES. She answered respondents’ questions “to the best of my understanding” about how teachers and providers would be affected by the initiative.
Corps members plan to meet with county superintendents of schools to express child care teachers’ and providers’ views on universal preschool issues, using the survey results and the Corps principles. In San Francisco, Feldman plans to be there, speaking out for developmentally appropriate learning standards and full-day care.
Universal preschool principles
The Corps supports Prop. 82, the Preschool for All initiative (see Proposition 82: Preschool for All) as a first step. When counties begin planning preschool programs, Corps members say they should:
- Provide full-day care by skilled teachers and providers
- Pay teachers and providers more based on education and experience
- Value early childhood education as important to preparing for work with young children
- Value the diversity of existing staff, settings, and teaching styles—and offer support for professional development
- Promote ethnic and language diversity among teachers and providers
- Make sure infant-toddler programs aren’t negatively affected by universal preschool.
Speak out
- on universal preschool: join Corps members in meeting with county officials about what should be included in universal preschool programs
- on the California budget: join the Corps at budget hearings and in letter-writing campaigns to legislators.
For more information, contact:
- Alameda: Marva Lyons, 510-521-3997, HappyMarva43734@cs.com and Margaret Costello-Chevis, 510-226-9414, mohavecomm@aol.com
- Butte: Paulette Fox, 530-876-8907, pjfx@strangecode.com
- Contra Costa: Stephanie Ratto, 925-689-5151 x204, lsratto@earthlink.net
- Humboldt: Polly Ramos, 707-825-0834, supercluck75@hotmail.com
- Los Angeles: Catherine Scott, 562-572-9939
- Marin: Sandra Estes, 510-233-1106
- Nevada: Barbara Price-Tison, 530-265-0778, pricetison@hughes.net
- Orange: Sue Miller, 714-744-2774, sue.miller@sbcglobal.net
- Placer: Gayle Kelley, 530-823-6218, gakids@inreach.com
- Riverside: Tamara Dobson, 951-340-3186
- San Diego: Katy Kenshur, 760-436-3725, kenshur@aol.com
- San Francisco: Valentina Feldman, 415-861-5361, val_fel@msn.com
- San Mateo: Silvia Espinoza, 650-359-4675, grandmascch@aol.com
- Santa Barbara: Christine Fleenor, 805-478-3237
- Solano: June Regis, 707-439-0876, aljuregis@aol.com
- Stanislaus: Pam Reeder, 209-544-9225
If your county is not listed above, contact Sara Hicks-Kilday at cares@caccwrc.org, 415-808-7327. For spanish, contact Teresa Calle-Streicker, 415-808-4126.
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