WHO WE ARE

Head Start, a program funded by United States Department of Health and Human Services, serves America’s most vulnerable young children and their families. Geminus Head Start programs deliver services in core areas of early learning, health, and family well-being while engaging parents as partners every step of the way. Geminus offers the following programs:

Head Start for preschool children ages 3 to 5

Early Head Start for pregnant women, infants and toddlers under the age of 3

EHS-CHILD CARE Partnership Program is a program serving child care centers by providing comprehensive and continuous services to low-income infants, toddlers, and their families.

Geminus Head Start is proud to be accredited by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC), a hallmark of a high quality programming.

 

OUR MISSION

Geminus Head Start is the Northwest Indiana leader in early childhood education, making a positive impact on families, children and staff through creative partnerships that inspire personal growth, foster empowerment and provide quality comprehensive services for all. We are committed to closing the achievement gap in our community through a two-generational approach that provides comprehensive services to enrolled children and their families, with a committed focus on:

Family Outcomes: We partner with parents by supporting efforts toward self-sufficiency and effective advocacy, while teaching research-based family life practices to ensure children are prepared for school.

Child Outcomes: We provide high quality programs with robust learning experiences that promote school readiness, ensuring children develop to their full potential.

 

OUR VISION

We are an organization of excellence supporting a highly qualified and dedicated staff that inspires children and families to achieve their full potential which prepares them for a successful and fulfilling life. We…

LEAD a high performing workforce implementing the strategic goals and objectives that demonstrate our vision through every effort and work product. We ensure each goal and objective is anchored in shared values and beliefs, integrity, commitment and quality customer service delivery.

ESTABLISH “gold standard” expectations, vetted through collective planning and demonstrated throughout intentional practices for target-based outcomes. We are creating a culture for professional performance with deliberate impact on the quality of service delivery by demonstrating Continuous Quality Improvement (CQI).

• CULTIVATE innovative thinking by creating a work climate that inspires trust and enthusiasm. We support research and professional learning as sacred endeavors; expecting ingenuity to grow from successful experiences with evidence-based practices.

 

OUR HISTORY

In January of 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson declared The War on Poverty in his State of the Union speech. Shortly thereafter, Sargent Shriver took the lead in assembling a panel of experts to develop a comprehensive child development program that would help communities meet the needs of disadvantaged preschool children. Among these experts were Dr. Robert Cooke, a pediatrician at John Hopkins University, and Dr. Edward Zigler, a professor of psychology and director of the Child Study Center at Yale University.

Part of the government’s thinking on poverty was influenced by new research on the effects of poverty, as well as on the impacts of education. This research indicated an obligation to help disadvantaged groups, compensating for inequality in social or economic conditions. Head Start was designed to help break the cycle of poverty, providing preschool children of low-income families with a comprehensive program to meet their emotional, social, health, nutritional and psychological needs. A key tenet of the program established that it be culturally responsive to the communities served, and that the communities have an investment in its success through the contribution of volunteer hours and other donations as nonfederal share.

In the summers of 1965 and 1966, the Office of Economic Opportunity launched an eight-week Project Head Start. In 1969, under the Nixon administration, Head Start was transferred from the Office of Economic Opportunity to the Office of Child Development in the U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Dr. Edward Zigler, who had served on the planning committee to launch Project Head Start, was appointed Director of the Office of Child Development. In 1977, under the Carter administration, Head Start began bilingual and bicultural programs in about 21 states. Seven years later, in October 1984 under the Reagan administration, Head Start’s grant budget exceeded $1 billion. In September of 1995, under the Clinton administration, the first Early Head Start grants were given and in October of 1998, Head Start was reauthorized to expand to full-day and full-year services.

Head Start was most recently reauthorized again in 2007, under the George W. Bush administration, with several provisions to strengthen Head Start quality. These include alignment of Head Start school readiness goals with state early learning standards, higher qualifications for the Head Start teaching workforce, State Advisory Councils on Early Care and Education in every state, and increased program monitoring, including a review of child outcomes and annual financial audits. The Head Start training and technical assistance system was redesigned to support programs through six National Centers and a state-based system to ensure success.

The statute also included a provision that regulations be promulgated to move programs from an indefinite project period to a five-year grant cycle. Programs would be required to demonstrate they are of high quality or a competitive grant opportunity would be made available within the community. In 2009, under the Obama administration, the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act added more than 64,000 slots for Early Head Start and Head Start programs.

Head Start has served over 30 million children since 1965, growing from an eight-week demonstration project to include full day/year services and many program options. Currently, Head Start is administered by the Administration for Children and Families (ACF) in the Department of Health and Human Services. Head Start serves over a million children and their families each year in urban and rural areas in all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. territories, including American Indian, Alaskan Native and Migrant/Seasonal communities.

Geminus supports early childhood education, family services, and prevention programs in Northwest and Northern Indiana. Our network of partners includes community-based health care and social services, welcoming Indiana residents of all ages and income levels with fully integrated, streamlined services.

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