Great Start for All Minnesota Children Task Force

Infrastructure to Support Early Childhood Systems

  • Administrative + Governance Models

Minnesota

In 2021, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz signed into law bipartisan legislation creating the Great Start for All Minnesota Children Task Force. The task force was charged with developing a state plan to ensure all families “have access to affordable, high-quality early care and education that enriches, nurtures, and supports children and their families.” The task force was comprised of 11 voting members appointed by the Governor, 4 voting members appointed by the legislature, and 22 non-voting members appointed by other individuals; membership included state agency representatives, child care providers, elected officials, and others. The task force completed their work and delivered a final report recommending various state actions for improving the accessibility, affordability, and quality of early education and care across the state.

Sources:

Minnesota Office of Management and Budget. (n.d.). Great Start for All Minnesota Children Task Force.

Great Start for All Minnesota Children Task Force. (2023, February 1). Final Report.

Connections to Key Early Learning Study at Harvard (ELS@H) Findings:

Strong infrastructure and systems – including governance structures and data systems – are key aspects of high-quality early education and care. And research suggests there is a need for more accessible, affordable, and high-quality early education within a mixed-delivery system; strengthening infrastructure and systems is one important way states and cities can take action to address these needs and accomplish these goals.

Findings from the Early Learning Study at Harvard (ELS@H) that connect to the need for more robust infrastructure and systems, including data systems:

  • Families rely on a range of formal (e.g., Head Start, center-based care, public pre-K) and more informal (e.g., home-based, relative care) early education settings; when choosing a setting for their child, families balance many logistical constraints and personal preferences.
  • But for many families – and especially low- and middle-income families – early education choices remain tightly constrained due to issues of affordability and supply.
  • No one early education setting type is inherently of higher quality than another; children develop and learn well in every setting type, and in the study, all setting types showed room to grow in quality.
  • We have learned a great deal from this groundbreaking, large-scale study. Nevertheless, there is still much to learn about what children, families, and educators need, and about what “works” – for whom and under what circumstances – across all the diverse settings where young children learn and grow.
Learn More about ELS@H Findings

Learn more about Minnesota

Context matters. Visit the Minnesota profile page to learn more about its demographics, political landscape, early education programs, early education workforce, and funding sources and streams.

Visit the Minnesota Profile Here
  • The state population is 5,717,184
  • The percentage of children under 6 with all available parents in the workforce is 76%
  • The rural percentage is 28.1%