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Project Head
Start began in earnest in 1965, an eight-week summer program for preschoolers.
These 40-plus years later, Head Start has grown into the premier provider of
early childhood education and social services for children in poverty. In that
time, millions of children who lived in poverty have gone on to achieve greater
and greater success, opening doors for future generations to experience the same
triumph over adversity.
The Region VI Head Start Association had its beginnings in a meeting at the
Regional Office in Dallas on a late summer day in 1979. Mr. Earl Richardson
presided at that historic meeting, on the request of Head Start personnel at the
Texas Tech Workshop.
The Director of the Head Start Bureau, Mr. Jim Robinson, had made it known that
the five states – Arkansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana and New Mexico – were
in need of an association to give unified direction and advocacy for families in
poverty. Directors, parents, staff members and friends of Head Start would be
involved.
From these
seeds of promise, leaders began organizing the Region VI Head Start Association,
following through with its goals to secure an organizational charter, provide
unity and keep parents informed to advocate for preschool children in poverty.
Throughout its beginnings, the association received its charter, developed
bylaws, established goals and objectives, assisted and encouraged the five
states to form state associations with four classes of members, reviewed and
approved each state association’s bylaws, planned and implemented annual
training conferences, responded to requests from the Regional Office, reviewed
and responded to national issues affecting Head Start and supported the National
Head Start Association.
As the
association grew, it was supported by Regional Office personnel, state
association officers, parents and friends of Head Start. Each year, a state
volunteered to host a training conference, offering the latest research and
developments in Head Start. Each year, the training grew in its scope to
incorporate legislative updates and other informational meetings.
Throughout
the 1980s, as administrations and attitudes toward impoverished families
changed, Head Start’s standing was challenged. Leaders in the Region VI and
other Head Start Associations united to stand strong for Head Start and the
families it serves, aiding parents in helping defeat legislation that would
undermine Head Start’s mission.
As the 1990s
began and the United States was engaged in war, Head Start and the local
associations continued to assist families living in poverty. Training
conferences shifted focus to include more research-based initiatives, such as
Early Head Start for pregnant women, infants and toddlers. The Region VI Head
Start Association led the way in organizing up-to-date training for Head Start
professionals in this new field. Head Start’s responsibilities continued to
grow as the Region VI Head Start Association adapted to a changing political
atmosphere.
In the midst
of the new century and millennium, the Region VI Head Start Association remains
a strong advocate for children and families in poverty and for its membership,
parents, staff and friends of Head Start. As state-funded pre-kindergarten grows
in quantity and quality, Region VI Head Start Association training conferences
have become institutes of learning for all early childhood professionals and
Head Start has become a universal model.
Today,
the Region VI Head Start Association’s member organizations serve more than
120,000 infants, toddlers and preschoolers and their families and nearly 20,000
staff members. The association has incorporated and operates smoothly with
participation from directors, staff, parents and friends who are constantly
meeting the challenges of producing a perpetual upgrading of services and
information for families and children.
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Upcoming
Events:
2008
Region VI Head Start
Annual Institute
Lafayette,
Louisiana
August
10-13, 2008
Hilton
Hotel
Click Here for
Information
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