The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston News Room The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston UT-Houston News Room

TEEM learning-readiness program receives
$8.3 million from Texas Workforce Commission

 

HOUSTON – (June 22, 2006)–Texas Workforce Commissioners today approved $8.3 million in Quality Childcare Matching Funds to more widely expand a pre-kindergarten education program developed by the State Center for Early Childhood Development at The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston.

Susan Landry, Ph.D

Susan Landry, Ph.D

The program, the Texas Early Education Model (TEEM), is a state-mandated effort to improve the readiness of children entering kindergarten. Child-care programs serving poor and at-risk children in 20 Texas communities are receiving resources, training and other support. Project evaluations have shown that Spanish- and English-speaking children are showing substantial gains in early literacy and language development, key ingredients in assuring success throughout their school years.

"This is highly significant in expanding the TEEM model to many new classrooms and communities in the state. The potential is that we can almost double our reach," said Susan Landry, Ph.D., the state center’s director, chief of the Division of Developmental Pediatrics and the Michael Matthew Knight Memorial Professor of Pediatrics at The University of Texas Medical School at Houston. “I want to thank the Texas Workforce Commission and Commissioner Diane Rath, who has been extremely committed to this kind of enhancement for the program."

The Texas Workforce Commission (TWC) receives funding from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to spend on quality child care, and the TWC has named TEEM as one of the recipients. TEEM is able to make the required match of the $8.3 million with funds received from the Texas Education Agency and a recent grant from the Michael & Susan Dell Foundation.

"This is a great opportunity to leverage state and federal dollars to help ensure that disadvantaged children enter school on a level playing field," said Diane Rath, Chair of the TWC.

TEEM was created by Senate Bill 76 in 2003. The early education model project encourages shared resources among government-funded public and private child-care programs including non-profit and for-profit childcare centers, public school districts and Head Start.

Key ingredients of TEEM include: a partnership among childcare and early education programs, implementing a teacher training program and using research-based, state-approved curricula.

In May 2005, TEEM reported to the Texas Legislature that its model of integrating early care and education services had resulted in greater school readiness among children. In particular, children of teachers who received TEEM training performed better. Overall, children improved in the areas most likely to predict reading success: vocabulary, letter knowledge and phonological knowledge (breaking sentences into words, hearing the beginning sounds of words and rhyming).

The 20 communities receiving currently receiving TEEM grant awards include: Abilene, Amarillo, Austin, Brownsville, Carrizo Springs, Corpus Christi, Dallas, El Paso, Fort Bend, Fort Worth, Houston, Kilgore, Laredo, Lubbock, Midland/Odessa, Raymondville, San Angelo, San Antonio, Victoria and Waco.
The Texas Workforce Commission is a state agency dedicated to helping Texas employers, workers and communities prosper economically. For details on TWC and the programs it offers in unison with its network of local workforce development boards, visit www.texasworkforce.org.

Media Contact: Deborah Mann Lake
Media Hotline:  713-500-3030