HEAD START HISTORY
In 1964, the Federal Government asked a panel of
child development experts to draw up a program to help
communities meet the needs of disadvantaged preschool
children.. The panel report became the blueprint for
Project Head Start.
Project Head Start, launched as an eight-week summer
program by the Office of Economic Opportunity in 1965,
was designed to help break the cycle of poverty by
providing preschool children of low-income families with
a comprehensive program to meet their emotional, social,
health, nutritional, and psychological needs. Recruiting
children age three to school entry age, Head Start was
enthusiastically received by education, child
development specialists, community leaders, and parents
across the Nation. Head Start serves 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 many American Indians and
migrant children.
In 1969, 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, and has now become a program within the
Administration on Children, Youth and Families in the
Department of Health and Human Services. A
well-established, though still an innovative program,
Head Start has had a strong impact on communities and
early childhood program across the country.
The program is locally administered by
community-based non-profit organizations and school
systems. Grants are awarded by the Department of Health
and Human Services Regional offices, except for the
American Indian and Migrant programs, which are
administered in Washington, D.C. |