Abstract
Administrative data are data regularly collected by organizations for monitoring and documentation purposes. They usually
represent entire populations; they are timely; and have direct influence on their sources which are mostly governmental agencies.
We argue in this paper that administrative data can and should be used as indicators of children’s well-being as they constitute
an existing body of knowledge that has the potential to form and influence policy. Such use of administrative data as of child
well-being indicators is demonstrated by the South Carolina Data Bridge Project, initiated with a child care research capacity
grant awarded in 2007 by the Office of Planning, Research and Families (OPRE) to study the impact of Child Care and Development
Fund on the quality of care available to and utilized by low-income working parents and at-risk families. The project’s goal
was achieved by linking different sources of child care administrative data to create analytic data cubes that allow the examination
of quality of care provided to children and factors contributing to it. This project indicates the importance of administrative
data and their potential impact on well-informed decision making and policy change to improve children and families’ well-being.
represent entire populations; they are timely; and have direct influence on their sources which are mostly governmental agencies.
We argue in this paper that administrative data can and should be used as indicators of children’s well-being as they constitute
an existing body of knowledge that has the potential to form and influence policy. Such use of administrative data as of child
well-being indicators is demonstrated by the South Carolina Data Bridge Project, initiated with a child care research capacity
grant awarded in 2007 by the Office of Planning, Research and Families (OPRE) to study the impact of Child Care and Development
Fund on the quality of care available to and utilized by low-income working parents and at-risk families. The project’s goal
was achieved by linking different sources of child care administrative data to create analytic data cubes that allow the examination
of quality of care provided to children and factors contributing to it. This project indicates the importance of administrative
data and their potential impact on well-informed decision making and policy change to improve children and families’ well-being.
- Content Type Journal Article
- DOI 10.1007/s12187-010-9096-9
- Authors
- Osnat Lavenda, Institute on Family and Neighborhood Life, Clemson University, Clemson, SC USA
- Beverly Hunter, South Carolina Department of Social Services, Columbia, SC USA
- McInerney Noelle, South Carolina Department of Social Services, Columbia, SC USA
- Leigh Bolick, South Carolina Department of Social Services, Columbia, SC USA
- Catherine Haselden, South Carolina Department of Social Services, Columbia, SC USA
- Diana Tester, South Carolina Department of Social Services, Columbia, SC USA
- Herman Knopf, Department of Education, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC USA
- Yoonsook Ha, College of Social work, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC USA
- Journal Child Indicators Research
- Online ISSN 1874-8988
- Print ISSN 1874-897X