​​​During the 2000 legislative session, House Bill 706 unanimously passed in both chambers of the Kentucky Legislature. At that time, it was the most comprehensive package of early childhood legislation in the nation addressing the needs of children. State and local partnerships were created to meet the locally identified needs of children and set the foundation for the Community Early Childhood Councils. In 2019, the Early Childhood Advisory Council voted to merge the councils based upon geographical location and in alignment with the 10 workforce areas. Today, this network of local partnerships is referred to as Regional Collaboratives and is led by the Governor’s Office of Early Childhood.

Regional Collaboratives are tasked with uniting organizations in local communities to address critical early years of a child’s life. The Kentucky Regional Collaborative Network:

  • Aligns birth-5 programs and strategies, reduces duplication and leverages additional resources to ensure children in their community have a strong start.
  • Collaborates with the Kentucky Center for Statistics (KYSTATS) on Early Childhood Profile to connect prevention ​services along the birth-5 pathway to increase access and opportunity.
  • ​Invests in data-driven solutions through local innovation and decision-making to grow Kentucky’s Bright Spots.
  • Effects change to make measurable progress toward locally defined community-wide goals.

For more information on how to get involved please contact eccouncil@ky.gov

Regional Collaborative Chairs List [XSL, 47kb]

​Required Reports

Please e-mail the completed forms to eccouncil@ky.gov ​​

Home Visitation

​​Health Access Nurturing ​Development Services (HANDS) meets criteria from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as an evidence-based ​model

​​​​​Kentucky’s home visitation program serves pregnant mothers and their newborns until children reach three years old. In 2015, Health Access Nurturing Development Services (HANDS) met criteria from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services as an evidence-based ​model.

Building Vocabulary

​​90% of 3-year-olds enrolled in the Early Steps program exceed vocabulary ​standards

85% of 5-year-olds enrolled in the Early Steps program exceed vocabulary standards

​In Eastern Kentucky, 90% of 3-year-olds and 85% of 5-year-olds enrolled in the Early Steps program exceed vocabulary standards.​​​​

Monitoring Growth, Learning, & Development

​Children who completed four or more
Ages and ​Stages Questionnaires® were
​6xmore likely to be
ready for kindergarten
compared to those who completed only one

​​In Louisville, children who completed four or more Ages and Stages Questionnaire®, a developmental screener, ​were nearly six times more likely to be ready for kindergarten than those who completed only one, controlling for demographic characteristics and ​developmental level (OR=5.70, p=0.06).

It is important to note that this finding approached statistical significance at the p<0.06 level. Given ​the relatively small comparison and intervention sample (n=31 and n=63, respectively), these findings should be interpreted with caution. A larger sample size is needed to confirm these results.

Developing Early Literacy

​​​​​​86%of children entered
kindergarten ​prepared
after participating in the Dolly Parton Imagination Libraryof the 52% of children identified as participants

​​​Nearly 30% of Kentucky’s Community Early Childhood ​Councils invest in the Dolly Parton Imagination Library. A Shelby County, Tennessee study shows that participation significantly is associated with increased scores in skill areas like language and math development.2 In Wayne County, Kentucky, of the 52% of children identified as participants in the Dolly Parton Imagination Library, 86% entered kindergarten prepared according to Wayne ​County Public Schools.

​2 Beckett, J. (n.d.). An investigation of the relationship between the Imagination Library program and ​kindergarten ​​literacy.

High-Quality Public Pre-K and Head Start

​53,000children
were eligible
for Public ​Pre-K and/or Head Startan additional 19,000​ eligible children could ​have been ​enrolled

​​​​Across Kentucky, income-eligible preschool students significantly were more likely to be kindergarten ready. Head Start Students, on average, outscored eligible students who were not enrolled. During Academic Year 2018, 53,000 children were eligible for Public Pre-K and/or Head Start and an additional 19,000​ eligible ​children could have been enrolled.

Transition to Kindergarten

​​​​60%of children were
better prepared
entering schools using best practice transition strategiescompared to the state average of 51.1% and county ​average of 54%

​​​​In Northern Kentucky, 60% of children who entered school where they used best practice transition strategies were better prepared compared to the state ​average of 51.1% and county average of 54% (Boone 56.2%, Campbell 54.6, and ​Kenton 52.2%).

Blending Funding to Better Serve Families

​​​​​2017

​63%of children entered
kindergarten ​prepared
compared to 50% of the state and 44.8% in the district

2018

​81%of children entered
kindergarten ​prepared
compared to 51% of the state and 45.6% in the ​district

​In Southeastern Kentucky, Public Pre-K collaborated ​with private child care to coordinate and strengthen services for families. Data indicates that children who participate in Public Pre-K half-day and the extended-day private child care for the other part of the day are better prepared for kindergarten. In 2017, data show 63% of children entered kindergarten prepared compared to 50% of the state and 44.8% in the district.

In 2018, data shows 81% of children entered kindergarten prepared compared to 51% of the state and 45.6% in the ​district.​​​

Born Learning

​​​​53.4%of students entered
school ​prepared
after attending the United Way Born Learning Academycompared to 46.6% that did not ​attend

​​The United Way Born Learning Academy is a series of school-based ​parent ​​workshops that engage expectant parents and families with young children to support early learning and school readiness. Developed in Northern Kentucky, it has been replicated throughout the commonwealth and adopted nationally by United Way Worldwide to increase ​school readiness. Kindergarten Readiness results during 2015-16 and 2020-21 show that of the nearly 500 children who participated, 53.4% entered school prepared compared to 46.6% of ​students who did not participate.


Bright Spots Printable ​Document