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While significant research has come forward to improve our collective understanding of human services programs and their contribution to the economic and social well-being of individuals and families, notable knowledge gaps continue to persist regarding how these programs can best serve the needs and interests of rural communities.

This brief summarizes findings from the Home Visiting Evidence of Effectiveness Review (HomVEE).

Read OPRE’s Division of Family Strengthening (DFS) Fiscal Year 2022 annual report, which includes details of projects related to strengthening relationships, supporting fatherhood, nurturing children through their families, reducing teen pregnancy, supporting positive youth development, and preventing family violence.

Explore OPRE's brief about the criteria the HomVEE review uses to determine which early childhood home visiting models to prioritize for review each year.

This page provides grant and funding information about the Head Start Graduate Student Research Program: 2003 Research Scholars.

This updated handbook describes the methods used by the Home Visiting Evidence of Effectiveness (HomVEE) review to review existing research and report the findings, beginning with the 2021 annual review.

This brief summarizes key findings related to implementing early childhood home visiting models in tribal communities and is intended for early childhood home visiting model program administrators.

This brief describes the capacity-building approach of the Administration for Children and Families (ACF), which helps Tribal Home Visiting grantees strengthen their data systems through TA from the Tribal Home Visiting Evaluation Institute (TEI). 

Qualitative research, which explores how or why something occurs, can contribute new knowledge to the understanding of home visiting. While qualitative research is sometimes viewed as a less rigorous add-on to quantitative research, studies utilizing qualitative research methods—whether part of a mixed-methods or as a standalone approach—can be rigorously designed to provide reliable and trustworthy information.

This work is part of the Design Options for Home Visiting Evaluation (DOHVE) project, led by OPRE in collaboration with HRSA. ACF has partnered with JBA to conduct the DOHVE project.

This brief summarizes key findings related to developing, tailoring and implementing early childhood home visiting models with tribal populations. It is intended for early childhood home visiting model program administrators and model developers, but may be useful to other audiences interested in home visiting in tribal communities. The brief draws on results from HomVEE’s review of research with tribal populations that included research published through September 2018.