Two-Generation Programs – Building Better Programs https://www.buildingbetterprograms.org Resources for Improving TANF and Related Work Programs Thu, 19 Mar 2015 21:21:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 Thriving Children, Successful Parents: A Two-Generation Approach to Policy https://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/2014/07/21/thriving-children-successful-parents-a-two-generation-approach-to-policy/ Mon, 21 Jul 2014 19:32:06 +0000 http://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/?p=747 Read more]]> The Center on Law and Social Policy released a brief on the Two-Generation approach to serving families.  The brief briefly describes the Two-Generation model and highlights where federal and state policies can be improved to support both parents as caregivers and workers and their children’s developmental and educational needs.

Thriving Children, Successful Parents: A Two Generation Approach to Policy (July 2014)

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Promoting Two-Generation Strategies – A Getting-Started Guide for State & Local Policy Makers https://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/2014/06/03/promoting-two-generation-strategies-a-getting-started-guide-for-state-local-policy-makers/ Tue, 03 Jun 2014 20:40:41 +0000 http://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/?p=680 Read more]]> This publication, presented by the Ray Marshall Center for the Study of Human Resources, the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas at Austin and the Foundation for Child Development, is meant to help local and state policymakers begin the process of implementing two-generation strategies in their communities.

A two generation strategy’s goal is to disrupt the intergenerational cycle of poverty with coordinated delivery of education, workforce training and support services.  Quality early childhood education, sectoral job training via postsecondary education or workforce intermediaries, and family support services that include adult education, ESL, career coaching, peer community-building, financial education and transportation assistance are critical components of this strategy.

The guide includes examples of two-generation programs, as well as highlights five facilitating factors that aid in the success of implementing a two-generation strategy: supportive policy frameworks, leadership, program administration, integrated and flexible funding streams and an evidence-oriented culture.  The guide also suggests some common steps for initiating this strategy.

The publication includes information about the following two-generation programs for reference: CareerAdvance (at the Community Action Project of Tulsa County, Oklahoma), Atlanta Civic Site (Atlanta, GA), the Jeremiah Program (Minneapolis, MN), and The Keys to Degrees Program at Endicott College (Beverly, MA).

Promoting Two-Generation Strategies: A Getting-Started Guide for State and Local Policy Makers

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Ascend at the Aspen Institute – The Two-Generation Approach https://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/2014/04/23/ascend-at-the-aspen-institute-the-two-generation-approach/ Wed, 23 Apr 2014 15:19:15 +0000 http://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/?p=498 Read more]]>

Ascend at The Aspen Institute is committed to creating opportunities for both children and parents to move up the economic ladder together, sustaining a legacy of economic security and educational success across generations. The Ascend Programs profiles include a range of emerging and established two-generation programs from across the United States that provide opportunities for and meet the needs of vulnerable children and their parents together. Ascend seeks to build a network and political will, elevate effective two-generation solutions, and spark and expand new conversation around two-generation programs.

Two-generation approaches can be found along a continuum. Whole-family approaches focus equally and intentionally on services and opportunities for the parent and the child. Child-parent approaches focus first or primarily on the child but are moving toward a two-generation approach and also include services and opportunities for the parent. Parent-child approaches focus first or primarily on the parent but are moving toward a two-generation approach and also include services and opportunities for children. There are three key components of the two-generation approach: Education, Economic Supports, and Social Capital. Health and well-being is an emerging component.

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AVANCE https://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/2014/04/23/avance/ Wed, 23 Apr 2014 15:11:19 +0000 http://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/?p=496 Read more]]> AVANCE is a national nonprofit dedicated to providing innovative education and family support services to hard-to-reach families since 1973. Specifically dedicated to serving marginalized communities, AVANCE strives to empower families to break the cycle of poverty through a proven two-generation approach combining early childhood development and parenting education. At the core, AVANCE believes that a program providing culturally appropriate parenting education, empowerment, and community building with early childhood development services to hard-to-reach families can change the trajectory of children’s lives. AVANCE found that the key to healthy early childhood development is a two-generation approach that capitalizes on parents’ inner strength and innate love for their children to help them become the best teachers and stewards of their children’s growth and success.  Parental education alone is not enough; an effective intervention must build parents’ resilience, interpersonal connections, networks, and access to education, jobs and other opportunities. True parental engagement empowers parents to become advocates for their children and families.

AVANCE website

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Jeremiah Program https://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/2014/04/23/jeremiah-program/ Wed, 23 Apr 2014 15:04:05 +0000 http://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/?p=493 Read more]]> Jeremiah Program is a nationally recognized nonprofit organization using a proven, holistic approach to transform families from poverty to prosperity two generations at a time. Through safe and affordable housing, quality early childhood education, life skills training and support for career-track education, Jeremiah Program prepares determined single mothers to succeed in the workforce, readies their children to succeed in school, and reduces generational dependence on public assistance.

Jeremiah Program website

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CareerAdvance https://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/2014/04/23/careeradvance/ Wed, 23 Apr 2014 14:43:29 +0000 http://www.buildingbetterprograms.org/?p=491 Read more]]> CAP Tulsa’s CareerAdvance® program is designed to help parents find their education and/or workplace path to success. While the early childhood education programs at CAP Tulsa have always served parents and children together, this new approach explicitly emphasizes parents’ educational attainment and opportunities for employment. CareerAdvance® offers coaching, education, training and job opportunities for CAP Tulsa, Educare and TANF parents with a focus on recipients with young children. Based on academic and social-emotional skill levels, participants are placed into one of four pathways:  Skill Ready, School Ready, College Bound or Career Bound. Our healthcare sector program, funded by the Health Professionals Opportunity Grant (HPOG), is a component within the Career Bound pathway. The object is for all participants to secure a good job with a family supporting wage and to help fill a critical workforce gap in the Tulsa economy.

CareerAdvance® website

Implementation of CareerAdvance® Series
CareerAdvance Implementation Report
Expanding the CareerAdvance® Program in Tulsa, Oklahoma
The Evolution of the CareerAdvance® Program in Tulsa, Oklahoma

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