A NATIONAL
STUDY OF HEAD START TRANSPORTATION PROGRAMS
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The primary goal of the study is to
promote safe and effective transportation programs for Head Start Preschool
Children. The principal objectives of the study were twofold: (1) to establish
transportation management procedures, driver training standards, and a driver training
manual for Head Start Agencies, and (2) create
The National Transportation Center for School Children (NTCSC).
Read The
Transporter - Premiere Edition, dedicated to the safe transportation of our children. |
Our Goal
To develop
educational materials and publications for school transportation program personnel |
Elements of a Safe Transportation System for Preschoolers |
 | Safe Vehicles
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 | Certified Drivers
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 | Availability of a
Strategic Plan
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 | Periodic Evaluations
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 | Exemplary Customer Service
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 | A Transportation Manager
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 | Safety-minded Drivers
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 | Monitors who back-up
Drivers
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 | Knowledgeable staff and
parents
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 | Adequate Budgets
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 | Policies and Procedures
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 | Training Programs
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 | Well-behaved Children who
Understand Transportation Safety
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 | Education Materials
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 | Knowledge of Local, State
and Federal Regulations and their Impact
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 | Eight Points on a Compass for Transportation
Safety
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This presentation was given at the National Head Start Association
conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota. What follows is a brief abstract of the
presentation which was intended to raise the audience's sights on transportation safety.
Setting the bar higher for transportation
of pre-schoolers. Standards for transporting preschool children
should be as high or higher than for bussing K-12 students. But what standards are
we talking about: What makes a vehicle safe? When is loading or unloading safe?
What other salient concerns?
Is yours a "best" practice, or
just so-so? The best practices in head start transportation today,
where are they, why are they "best", and can you replicate them? Among the
topics: How can children's bus rides become a learning experience; when is it time to get
rid of that "old" bus?
Big and little ideas that work.
Swifter diffusion of innovations through the Head Start world! Among the
topics: the bus driver's necessaries kit -- what he or she really needs within reach
if a child has a medical problem; the most effective interactive communication
systems for buses and bus drivers.
Doing what everybody else does -- when
national uniformity makes practical sense. Elements of Head Start
transportation systems that ought to be the same and be treated the same in every state!
Among the examples: certification standards for drivers; the elements of a
basic driver training program; the minimum emergency equipment to be stored on a bus; and
bus stop and start signaling rules.
Adaptable models for busy people.
Program directors and transportation coordinators, busy with day to day problems,
may find adaptable models of standards and practices handy in coping with small but
important transportation components. Among the possibilities: training drivers on
defensive driving techniques, or on proper pre-trip bus inspections, or on assuring
comfortable transportation for children with physical disabilities.
Does anybody have the answer to your
question? Providing a reliable connection between project directors
with difficult questions and resource people with sophisticated answers: how might
it be done? Among the questions that might be fielded: how to achieve a
cost-effective contract with a private bus company; practical ways of operating buses in
high-density urban neighborhoods, or in short-term migrant programs, or in a sparsely
settled rural area.
Information you may like to study if only
you have time to find and organize it. In the Head Start universe
there are certain issues that call for comprehensive factual treatment before decisions
are made about them. Among those issues: compensation packages for drivers and
monitors; all-perils insurance portfolios; using transportation expenses as a local
match.
Easy on, easy off, and perfectly secure
passengers: designing buses for tiny tots. A proposal for
intimate cooperation between Head Start professionals, pediatricians, state and national
transportation specialists, and school bus manufacturers to design and market a
cost-effective vehicle that will assure safe transportation for infants and toddlers.
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This publication highlights study
findings and other facts, figures and trends in Head Start Transportation Programs. |
 | Study Highlights (Facts, Figures and Findings) In October 1997 M.
H. West & Co., Inc. initiated work on a national study of Head Start transportation
systems. Heading the extensive study which by design will culminate with the
development and operation of a National Transportation Center for
School Children is Marilyn H. West, Owner and President of M. H. West & Co.,
Inc. Working with her on this three-phased project was John R. Rothermel, D.
Ed. Both Mrs. West and Dr. Rothermel have strong research skills and extensive
experience working with health and human service organizations in program evaluation,
planning and implementation. They along with other members of the project team
generated significant data and information about Head Start transportation programs.
This information is providing the foundation and underlying principles for the guidance
and technical assistance that is available currently on a limited basis to Head Start
programs and will be available on a large scale in the fall of 1999. |
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 | Preschool Children Transportation Programs,
Selected "Best Practices" Preschool transportation agencies must
consider factors such as passenger comfort, high performance and safety in the operation
of their transportation systems. Safety is paramount. This publication
highlights guidelines for Head Start Programs to follow to achieve "Best
Practices" in their transportation programs. The foundation of these
guidelines is the 1998 national study completed by M. H. West & Co., Inc.
Support for this initiative has been a two-year SBIR Grant funded through the Head Start
Bureau of the Administration for Children and Families.
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Guidelines for "Best
Practices" in Transportation Programs include the following areas:
transportation agency vehicles
drivers
monitors
teachers
parents |
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