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Utah's Foremost Platform for Undergraduate Research Presentation
2020 Abstracts

Funding Community College Child Care Services: How the Child Care Access Means Parents in School (CCAMPIS) Funding Influences Institutional Policy and Practice

Avondet, Callie (University of Utah)

Faculty Advisor: Taylor, Jason (College of Education; Education, Leadership & Policy)

A shocking 33% of student parents graduate from college (Institute for Women's Policy Research, 2014). Part of this low graduation rate has been attributed to scheduling difficulties: the hours classes are offered, planning group-project meetings, and out of class requirements making it difficult to coordinate childcare (Kensinger and Minnick, 2018). Child Care Access Means Parents in School (CCAMPIS) is a federal program that provides money for childcare services to qualifying students at institutions whose students receive a total of $350,000 or more in federal Pell grant funding (Baskerville, 2013) . In fiscal year (FY) 2018 the overall amount of funding allocated to CCAMPIS and the number of schools getting this government grant nearly doubled. This provided CCAMPIS funding to many colleges that did not previously have it (Department of Education, n.d.). This project interviews the child care director from one randomly selected community college from each of the 9 US Census districts (excluding DC and Puerto Rico) to understand how CCAMPIS funding for FY 2018 changed institutional policy, practice, and programs related to child care in community colleges that did not receive CCAMPIS funding in FY 2017. Although data is still being collected, preliminary data suggests that CCAMPIS allows institutions to mold their childcare programs to the needs of their students through various projects. It also frees up more funding to help students who would still struggle financially to get access to childcare but do not meet the formal requirements for CCAMPIS money.