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285 – United States of America’s Head Start Programme of 1965,

expanded in 1981 and reauthorized in 2007, United States of America

Responsible body:

Department of Health and Human Services (Administration for Children and

Families, in particular the Office of Head Start)

Country of implementation:

United States of America

Beneficiaries targeted:

Children from low-income families from birth to 5, but also a certain amount of

children from families above the poverty line under certain criteria

(emergency, disabilities…)

S

UMMARY

The United States of America’s Head Start Programme started in 1965 and was expanded in 1981 and reauthorized in

2007. It

is the oldest and largest federal programme to deliver high-quality early learning opportunities to low-income

children, founded on the idea that every child deserves the chance to reach their full potential. The programme

provides comprehensive early childhood education, health, nutrition, and parent involvement services to low-income

children and their families. Since 1972 Head Start programmes had been required to reserve at least 10 percent of their

enrollment opportunities for children with disabilities, with sharpened requirements since 2007.

C

ONTEXT

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Launched in 1965, Head Start was originally conceived as a catch-up summer school programme that would teach low-

income children in a few weeks what they needed to know to start elementary school. A few months later, Head Start

would be expanded to a year-round programme, and from 1966 to 1981, summer-only programs were phased out.

Head Start has long had a special focus on the needs of children who are living with disabilities. Since 1972, before the

enactment of the federal special education law now known as the Individual with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), Head

Start programs have been required to reserve at least 10 percent of their enrollment opportunities for children with

disabilities. In 1975, the first Head Start Programme Performance Standards were published. The Head Start Act of 1981

expanded the programme. In 1994, Early Head Start was introduced servicing children from age 0 to 3. In 1990,

Congress passes the Head Start Expansion and Quality Improvement Act, which includes set-aside funds for quality

improvement and reserves two percent of total funding for training. To reauthorize the Head Start Act, to improve

programme quality and to expand access, the Public Law 110-134 (“Improving Head Start for School Readiness Act of

2007”) came into force, with bipartisan support. It required that at least 10 percent of enrollees are children with

disabilities and specific provisions to support high-quality early learning opportunities

for them have to made.

Requirements are specified since 2009, the Head Start Performance Standards that define standards and minimum

requirements for the entire range of Early Head Start and Head Start services. They are applicable to both Head Start

and Early Head Start programmes.