You Want Data? We Got Data! Kids Count Provides Wisconsin Indicators of Kids’ Well-Being

by | August 21, 2013

Home 9 Early Care and Education 9 You Want Data? We Got Data! Kids Count Provides Wisconsin Indicators of Kids’ Well-Being ( Page 15 )

Annie E. Casey Foundation and the Wisconsin Council on Children and Families (WCCF) have worked together to provide a treasure trove of data on Wisconsin children on the revised easy-to-use KIDS COUNT website:  http://datacenter.kidscount.org/data#WI/2/0

Tips for Using the KIDS COUNT Website

The website allows users to see Wisconsin indicators and trends, with some data at the county, Congressional district, school district, and city levels. The tool can also show how Wisconsin compares to other states, by asking for data for all states, and asking for Wisconsin’s rank. The Wisconsin data website indicates the source of the data:

  an orange circle for WCCF

and a blue triangle for National KIDS COUNT
Indicators are organized by topic:

•    Demographics
•    Economic Well-Being
•    Education
•    Family and Community
•    Health
•    Safety and Risky Behaviors

Sample of data

In this blog, I selected 12 Wisconsin indicators relevant to early childhood development to show the kinds of data you can find. 
Dave Edie

Selected Wisconsin Indicators Year Number % National Rank    Trends
Demographics
1. Child population
ages 0-4
(note you can find population
by single age group as well)
2011 354,582 27% of all
children
Percent the
same as
national
percent
Not much
change over
4 years
2. Child population by race 2011 73% White
11% Hispanic
9% Black/ African American
2% Asian
Hispanic increase
of 2%, white
decrease of
3% over
4 years
Economic Well-Being
3. Children under age 6 with all available parents in the
labor force
2011 299,000 73% Tied for 4th
highest
5% increase over 8 years
4. Children in poverty ages 0-5 2011 87,000 21% Tied for 15th
lowest rate of poverty
Increase of
5% over
4 years
Education
5. Children ages 3-5 not enrolled in nursery school, preschool or kindergarten 2011 91,000 42% 25th rank 2% improve-
ment over 4 years
6. Children ages 1-5 whose family members read to them less than 3 days a week 2011-
2012
23,000 7% Tied for 3rd
best
Improved slightly
7. 4 year old kindergarten enrollment 2012 45,438 Increase of
60% over
4 years
8. Fourth grade reading at or above proficiency 2011 34% Tied for 20th Not much
change
9. Fourth graders who scored below proficient reading by race 2011 61% White
61% Asian
87% Hispanic
88% Black/AA
Varies, but
WI
ranks low for Black/AA
Not much
change
Health
10. Children without health insurance ages 0-5 2010 21,000 5% Tied for 5th
best
2% increase over 10 yrs.
11. Low birth-weight babies 2010 4818 7% Tied for 12th best Fairly stable
for last few years
12. Low birth-weight babies by race: Black/AA 2010 952 13.6% WI is among 14 states with the highest rate of
low birth-weight black/AA babies
Not much
change over
4 years

Join us to build a Wisconsin where every child and family thrives.

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