Oklahoma Child Wellbeing

Prevention-Focused Accountability & Early Warning Platform

About the Pilot

Connecting early warning indicators to coordinated action, accountability, and measurable child well-being outcomes.

OK Child Wellbeing is a local accountability pilot focused on early identification, coordinated response, and measurable improvement in child and family outcomes. The project is designed to help communities move from fragmented data and delayed intervention toward shared visibility, assigned responsibility, and earlier support. When children show signs of risk, the pilot asks which systems have authority to respond, what action was taken, and whether outcomes improved.

How This Is Different

This pilot connects measurement to action. The goal is to make risk visible earlier, assign responsibility more clearly, and track whether coordinated response improves outcomes. The central framework follows a clear path: Indicator, Authority, Assigned Response, Follow-Up, Outcome.

The Signature Difference: Outcome Ownership

Outcome Ownership is the pilot's central accountability model. It does not claim that one person or agency is solely responsible for a child's outcome. Instead, it shows which systems have authority to act, whether action was assigned, and whether the child well-being outcome improved. This moves the conversation from passive measurement to coordinated responsibility.

The purpose is not to ask only, "What happened?" The purpose is to ask, "Who had the authority to respond, what was done, and did it make a difference?"

What Makes This Different

Moves beyond awareness to assigned response
Connects education, safety, health, housing, and workforce indicators
Identifies which system has authority to act
Tracks whether follow-up occurred
Measures whether outcomes improved over time

OK Child Wellbeing helps local leaders identify risk earlier, assign responsibility, track follow-up, and measure whether outcomes improve.

1

Measure Child Well-Being

Academic progress, attendance, health, behavioral well-being, safety, stability, and family protective factors.

Identify Risk Drivers

Housing instability, school mobility, domestic violence exposure, poverty, health barriers, transportation barriers, and family support gaps.

3

Connect Systems to Response

Schools, district teams, healthcare partners, child welfare where applicable, courts and legal systems, community providers, and family support organizations.

Track Accountability

Who had authority, who was assigned responsibility, what action was taken, what remained unresolved, and whether outcomes improved.

Independent Demonstration Pilot

This project is an independent demonstration pilot. Current dashboard data is illustrative only and does not represent live official student, district, government, or agency data.

Illustrative data for demonstration only. Not actual student data. Public-facing dashboard concepts should use aggregate/de-identified data and protect student privacy.

Explore the Platform

Review the real-time dashboard, explore the pilot framework, or connect with us about partnership opportunities.