Advocacy Strategies

Application: Action Plan 5: Advocating for Children and Families in Your Community

As you have learned in this course, societal factors and issues impact young children and their families. Both as a student of child development and in your future role as a professional who works with young children and their families, you have a responsibility to take an advocacy role in addressing these issues with the goal of improving conditions that affect children’s healthy development and learning.

Action Plan Professional Scenario: You have been challenged by a mentor you respect and admire to demonstrate your commitment to young children, their families, and the field of early childhood. Your mentor asks you to think about the many factors and issues that affect children’s healthy development and learning and choose one that you care about personally, examine the issue in your state, and then identify advocacy strategies you can use to champion this cause.

Before you develop your Action Plan, consider:

  • What you need to know to understand the issue you choose
  • What ideas and advice from experts will be effective in addressing the issue
  • What you can do as an advocate to support young children, their families, and/or the field of early childhood

Follow these steps to create your Action Plan:

1. What You Need to Know: Learning About an Issue of Concern

There are many issues of concern to those who care about the rights and needs of young children and their families. Below are two issues and related articles/Web sites, including sources for finding information specific to your state. Select the issue that is of greater interest to you. Then as you read, take notes to help you summarize the issue and how it impacts children, families, and communities in your state.

As an alternative, you are also free to choose a different issue that you are passionate about and develop your Action Plan around that topic of concern. Include your sources for all information on the issue that you use in creating your plan.

  • Issue 1: Providing High-Quality Child Care for All Children
    • Quality Child Care Helps Parents Work and Children Learn (PDF)
    • Child Care Basics (PDF)
    • State Fact Sheets on Early Childhood Development, Children’s Defense Fund
      http://www.childrensdefense.org/child-research-data-publications/data/state-data-repository/children-in-the-states-factsheets.html
      (Click on your state: All data relevant)
  • Issue 2: Children Living in Poverty
    • Defining Poverty and Why it Matters for Children. (PDF)
    • Kids Count Data Center: Data by State
      http://datacenter.kidscount.org/data/bystate/Default.aspx
      (Click on your state: View “Economic Well-Being” indicator, and click on “Poverty” indicator)

2. Ideas and Advice: Checking Resources for Advocacy Strategies

Review pages 388–393 in your text and access any or all of the Web site below to identify advocacy strategies. Take notes on ideas that would be effective in addressing your issue of concern and that you personally could carry out.

  • Sticking Up for Early Childhood Programs
    http://sparkaction.org/node/332
  • Early Childhood Advocacy Toolkit
    http://www.state.ia.us/earlychildhood/EC_resources/advocacy/advocacy_toolkit.html
  • Organizing Your Advocacy Efforts
    http://www.state.ia.us/earlychildhood/docs/Part7REVISED.pdf
  • Tools and Resources
    http://www.ounceofprevention.org/advocacy/advocacy-tools.php

3. Taking Action: Advocating for the Issue You Chose

Combine the knowledge you have gained and strategies you have gathered to take action! Complete your Action Plan in three parts:

  • Part I: Identify the Issue: Explain in your own words how this issue is affecting children, families, and communities in your state.