Elizabeth Burke Bryant, the Executive Director of RI Kids Count talks about the release of the 2017 Rhode Island Kids
Count Factbook.
In Rhode Island, elected officials and community leaders use both the national Kids Count Data Book, so they can see how RI compares to the other states and the nation as a whole, and the annual Rhode Island Kids
Count Factbook, to see how Rhode Island is doing state - wide and throughout its 39 cities and towns.
She then looked to the 2014 Rhode Island Kids
Count Factbook.
«The data that we present in the 2011 Rhode Island Kids
Count factbook can help policy makers make informed decisions about what programs and policies are most important to ensuring the success of our children and our state.»
The decision follows the release of the 2015 Kids
Count Factbook, which shows that Woonsocket High School has the lowest rate of attendance of any high school in the state, at just 86 percent.
The Rhode Island Kids
Count Factbook will be formally unveiled at a breakfast event Monday, but Eyewitness News got a sneak peek at all of the data.
Posted in Barrington, Central Falls, East Greenwich, Featured, Inequality, Pawtucket, Providence, Rhode Island, Scituate Tagged barrington, block island, Central Falls, east greenwich, Jamestown, Kids Count, Kids
Count Factbook, Little Compton, pawtucket, Poverty, Providence, Woonsocket Leave a response
Defined by Rhode Island's Kids
Count factbook as the number of children under age 18 who stayed in homeless shelters, domestic violence shelters or transitional housing facilities in Rhode Island with their families.
Based on the 21st annual publication of the Kids
Count Factbook, Geller delivered her data - driven summary to a packed room.
The annual Kids
Count Factbook on child well - being in Rhode Island, now in its 23rd year, is a local rite of spring — but it's nothing like the first tulips or tufted titmouse.
Not exact matches
Locally, Rhode Island KIDS
COUNT takes data «on the road» to several communities with Data in Your Backyard presentations, which makes the
Factbook more accessible to community leaders and policy makers.