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General Information |
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Head
Start and Early Head Start are comprehensive child development
programs which serve children from birth to age 5, pregnant
women, and their families. They are child-focused programs and have
the overall goal of increasing the school readiness
of young children in low-income families.
The
Head Start program is administered by the Head Start Bureau, the
Administration on Children, Youth and Families (ACYF),
Administration for Children and Families (ACF), Department of Health
and Human Services (DHHS). Grants are awarded
by the ACF Regional Offices and the Head Start Bureau's American
Indian and Migrant Program Branches directly to
local public agencies, private organizations, Indian Tribes and school
systems for the purpose of operating Head Start programs
at the community level.
The
Head Start program has a long tradition of delivering comprehensive
and high quality services
designed to foster healthy development in low-income children. Head Start grantee and delegate agencies provide a range of individualized services in the aeas of education and early childhood development; medical, dental, and mental health; nutrition; and parent involvement. In addition, the entire range of Head Start services is responsive and appropriate to each child's and family’s developmental, ethnic, cultural, and linguistic heritage and experience.
All
Head Start programs must adhere to Program Performance Standards.
The Head Start Program Performance
Standards define the services that Head Start
Programs are to provide to the children and families they serve. They
constitute the expectations and requirements that Head
Start grantees must meet. They are designed to ensure that the Head
Start goals and objectives are implemented successfully,
that the Head Start philosophy continues to thrive, and that all
grantee and delegate agencies maintain the highest possible
quality in the provision of Head Start services. For more information
please contact the Head Start Publications Management Center.
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