TP2AH000089
Cooperative Agreement
Overview
Grant Description
Breakthrough Accelerator: Scaling Innovations Through Equity-Centered Design - Child Trends, in partnership Power to Decide, propose to host an accelerator innovation hub – the Breakthrough Accelerator.
Our vision is a world in which all adolescent sexual and reproductive health (ASRH) programs, products, and services are informed by adolescents' lived experience and contexts, co-designed with the adolescents who will use them, implemented with an equity focus, and positively impact adolescents.
Our mission is to build the capacity of Innovation Design Teams (IDTs) to use equity-focused practices to test, refine, evaluate, and scale innovations that consider the root causes of health inequities, thereby filling critical program gaps and advancing ASRH equity.
The Breakthrough Accelerator will have two tracks - Commercialization and Evaluation. The Commercialization track is appropriate for IDTs that want to establish their innovation as a best practice. They may want to take their innovation to market for the first time, be interested in dissemination and scaling, or be seeking support to build a sustainable operational structure to support their innovation over time.
The Evaluation track is appropriate for IDTs that want to move toward conducting a rigorous evaluation with the goal of becoming evidence-based.
Our vision of hub success is aligned with our understanding of equity and innovation as processes and outcomes. To this end, we aim to track and measure the movement of six to eight IDTs per cohort through the innovation continuum, as well as the extent to which IDTs ultimately feel a sense of agency in their work – in their ability to take their innovation to market or scale or to rigorously evaluate it, and to incorporate equitable practices.
This view of success as iterative and dynamic and will require a holistic, creative, and multi-method approach to measurement. We expect evaluation and learning to be critical features of the project and we will use both quantitative and qualitative methods to meaningfully explore our performance and progress.
In addition to capacity-building and evaluation support provided to IDTs, we will develop and implement an ambitious learning agenda to ensure that we consistently examine, improve, and amplify the innovations and learnings of our hub. This agenda will serve as a critical guidepost for our project design, implementation, evaluation, and dissemination activities.
Informed by liberatory design, our agenda will center the core question underpinning our hub's theoretical approach: "How can innovation serve as a force for equity in ASRH and address the historical and current inequities?" We aim to not only improve hub processes but also inform and push forward innovation within the ASRH field.
Dissemination will be an ongoing and essential project component. We will target diverse audiences, from practitioners to researchers, to current or potential IDTs, to innovation end-users and other youth. Importantly, we will treat dissemination as a collaborative and bi-directional process and recognize IDTs as key partners in success. Throughout, we will center lived experience, being sure to build in opportunities for IDT members and youth to guide our team's efforts.
Our proposed project team is well-equipped to implement the Breakthrough Accelerator. Child Trends and Power to Decide have a history of working together, and with OPA, to advance ASRH. Combined, we consist of 15 staff highly skilled in innovation, capacity-building assistance, and evaluation, with expertise in ASRH, teen pregnancy prevention, human-centered design, and youth participatory action research. Our combined experience demonstrates our unique ability to identify IDTs likely to be successful in advancing their innovation along the continuum and to build their capacity to do so (through evaluation or scaling), centering equity every step of the way.
Our vision is a world in which all adolescent sexual and reproductive health (ASRH) programs, products, and services are informed by adolescents' lived experience and contexts, co-designed with the adolescents who will use them, implemented with an equity focus, and positively impact adolescents.
Our mission is to build the capacity of Innovation Design Teams (IDTs) to use equity-focused practices to test, refine, evaluate, and scale innovations that consider the root causes of health inequities, thereby filling critical program gaps and advancing ASRH equity.
The Breakthrough Accelerator will have two tracks - Commercialization and Evaluation. The Commercialization track is appropriate for IDTs that want to establish their innovation as a best practice. They may want to take their innovation to market for the first time, be interested in dissemination and scaling, or be seeking support to build a sustainable operational structure to support their innovation over time.
The Evaluation track is appropriate for IDTs that want to move toward conducting a rigorous evaluation with the goal of becoming evidence-based.
Our vision of hub success is aligned with our understanding of equity and innovation as processes and outcomes. To this end, we aim to track and measure the movement of six to eight IDTs per cohort through the innovation continuum, as well as the extent to which IDTs ultimately feel a sense of agency in their work – in their ability to take their innovation to market or scale or to rigorously evaluate it, and to incorporate equitable practices.
This view of success as iterative and dynamic and will require a holistic, creative, and multi-method approach to measurement. We expect evaluation and learning to be critical features of the project and we will use both quantitative and qualitative methods to meaningfully explore our performance and progress.
In addition to capacity-building and evaluation support provided to IDTs, we will develop and implement an ambitious learning agenda to ensure that we consistently examine, improve, and amplify the innovations and learnings of our hub. This agenda will serve as a critical guidepost for our project design, implementation, evaluation, and dissemination activities.
Informed by liberatory design, our agenda will center the core question underpinning our hub's theoretical approach: "How can innovation serve as a force for equity in ASRH and address the historical and current inequities?" We aim to not only improve hub processes but also inform and push forward innovation within the ASRH field.
Dissemination will be an ongoing and essential project component. We will target diverse audiences, from practitioners to researchers, to current or potential IDTs, to innovation end-users and other youth. Importantly, we will treat dissemination as a collaborative and bi-directional process and recognize IDTs as key partners in success. Throughout, we will center lived experience, being sure to build in opportunities for IDT members and youth to guide our team's efforts.
Our proposed project team is well-equipped to implement the Breakthrough Accelerator. Child Trends and Power to Decide have a history of working together, and with OPA, to advance ASRH. Combined, we consist of 15 staff highly skilled in innovation, capacity-building assistance, and evaluation, with expertise in ASRH, teen pregnancy prevention, human-centered design, and youth participatory action research. Our combined experience demonstrates our unique ability to identify IDTs likely to be successful in advancing their innovation along the continuum and to build their capacity to do so (through evaluation or scaling), centering equity every step of the way.
Awardee
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Montgomery,
Maryland
United States
Geographic Scope
County-Wide
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 100% from $1,884,984 to $3,769,968.
Child Trends was awarded
ASRH Innovation Hub: Equity-Centered Breakthrough Accelerator
Cooperative Agreement TP2AH000089
worth $3,769,968
from the Office of Adolescent Health in September 2023 with work to be completed primarily in Maryland United States.
The grant
has a duration of 5 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.297 Teenage Pregnancy Prevention Program.
The Cooperative Agreement was awarded through grant opportunity Teen Pregnancy Prevention Tier 2 Adolescent Sexual Health Innovation Hubs.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 9/5/24
Period of Performance
9/15/23
Start Date
9/14/28
End Date
Funding Split
$3.8M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$3.8M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for TP2AH000089
Transaction History
Modifications to TP2AH000089
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
TP2AH000089
SAI Number
TP2AH000089-4010859131
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Nonprofit With 501(c)(3) IRS Status (Other Than An Institution Of Higher Education)
Awarding Office
750SHA OASH OFFICE OF GRANTS MANAGEMENT
Funding Office
75ACR0 OASH OFFICE OF ADOLESCENT HEALTH
Awardee UEI
GKL3GR9NQ3W5
Awardee CAGE
3V6V4
Performance District
MD-90
Senators
Benjamin Cardin
Chris Van Hollen
Chris Van Hollen
Budget Funding
Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
General Departmental Management, Departmental Management, Health and Human Services (075-0120) | Health care services | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $1,884,984 | 100% |
Modified: 9/5/24