All Work

Early Childhood Education


How Family Policy Debates Sometimes Ignore the Family Itself

Dr. Katharine Stevens joins host Nic Dunn of the Sutherland Institute to help recenter true pro-family policy at the core of public debates and offer policymakers and voters a framework for a better approach.

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Economic Mobility, Federal Policy, State Policy, Pre-K Katharine Stevens Economic Mobility, Federal Policy, State Policy, Pre-K Katharine Stevens

“Build Back Better”: A Flawed Agenda or the Right Plan for Early Care and Education Policy?

An expert panel joins CCFP and the Niskanen Center to discuss Katharine Stevens’s new report on the strengths and weaknesses of Build Back Better’s early care and education legislation, and the best path forward for federal policy.

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Empowering Parents and Scaling Preschool Success (with Art Rolnick)

Katharine Stevens interviews economist Art Rolnick about his nationally recognized work with the Minnesota Early Learning Scholarships program, a parent-choice-driven model providing scholarships to parents with children from ages prenatal to five.

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How Early Childhood is the Foundation of Social Capital (with Chris Bullivant)

Katharine Stevens interviews Chris Bullivant about why social capital matters to a thriving society, and how the foundation of social capital is formed through children’s secure attachment established in the birth-to-three period.

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Parenting Is the Key to Early Development and Social Mobility – Part 2 (with James Heckman and Jorge Luis Garcia)

In the second part of this two-part conversation, Katharine Stevens continues her discussion with economists James Heckman and Jorge Luis Garcia about their pioneering research on how improving parenting is the essential mechanism of effective early childhood programs.

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Parenting Is the Key to Early Development and Social Mobility (with James Heckman and Jorge Luis Garcia)

In the inaugural episode of CCFP's new podcast, Katharine Stevens interviews renowned economists James Heckman and Jorge Luis Garcia about their collaborative research on the power of early childhood interventions to promote social mobility and build human capital.

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A Flawed Agenda for America’s Young Children: Build Back Better’s Blueprint for Early Care and Education

Is Build Back Better really dead? Katharine B. Stevens analyzes the childcare and universal preschool provisions of BBB, revealing a detailed legislative blueprint of an increasingly influential vision for America’s young children: federally-controlled preschool programs for all children from birth onwards.

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Is the Impact of Pre-K on Children Negative? — Tipping Point New Mexico

This fall, New Mexico voters will vote on proposed use of New Mexico's Land Grant Permanent Fund to fund universal pre-K. Paul Gessing sits down with Katharine Stevens, CEO of the newly-launched Center on Child and Family Policy, to discuss New Mexico's growing pre-K push.

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Federal Policy, Advocacy in the ECE Field Katharine Stevens Federal Policy, Advocacy in the ECE Field Katharine Stevens

A Big Stake in the Ground for Universal Childcare Via the American Rescue Plan

The American Rescue Plan was presented as an emergency response to prevent the childcare sector from collapsing. But its primary aims are in fact to advance a longstanding advocacy agenda: leveraging pandemic relief funds to carry out a kind of “trial run” of universal childcare.

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Improving Early Childhood Development by Allowing Advanced Child Tax Credits

Katharine Stevens and Matt Weidinger propose allowing parents to advance future child tax credits into the earliest years of their child’s life, strengthening families' ability to choose how and by whom their children are cared for during the formative first years of development.

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