Many Happy Returns: Why school boards should care about Pre-K

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Many Happy Returns: Why school boards should care about Pre-K Laurie Hart, NSBA Development Manager-Central Region Jim Edwards, Kansas Association of School Boards Patte Barth, NSBA, Center for Public Education Wisconsin State Education Convention January 23, 2008 The Center for Public Education

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The Center for Public Education. Many Happy Returns: Why school boards should care about Pre-K. Laurie Hart , NSBA Development Manager-Central Region Jim Edwards , Kansas Association of School Boards Patte Barth , NSBA, Center for Public Education Wisconsin State Education Convention - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Many Happy Returns: Why school boards should care about Pre-K

Many Happy Returns:Why school boards should care

about Pre-KLaurie Hart, NSBA Development Manager-Central

RegionJim Edwards, Kansas Association of School Boards

Patte Barth, NSBA, Center for Public Education

Wisconsin State Education ConventionJanuary 23, 2008

The Center for Public Education

Page 2: Many Happy Returns: Why school boards should care about Pre-K

Agenda

• Why pre-K?

• The school board role

• State trends – access AND quality

• A federal role

questions

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7 8 9

4 5 6

1 2 3

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Pre-kindergarten education means putting little children in desks.

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FalseHome

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Gains made in preschool fade out in elementary school.

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FalseHome

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Each dollar invested in high-quality pre-k can save the community up to $16 dollars later on.

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TrueHome

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Kids with high-quality pre-k are less likely to drop out of high school.

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TrueHome

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Pre-k is only important for low-SES children or children with special needs.

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FalseHome

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School boards have no voice in pre-kindergarten education.

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FalseHome

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Why should school boards care about pre-K?

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What school board members say about pre-k

• Greatest benefit: accelerates children’s social, emotional, and cognitive development to become school ready (77%)

• Reduces the achievement gap between low-income children and their more affluent peers (71%)

• Reduces district expenses by decreasing remediation and special education costs (46%)

Source: NSBA survey of school board members, 2006

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Challenges

• Making pre-K a public priority

• Implementing a sound system – one that accommodates diverse providers

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Findings from Survey: Challenges79%

26%

17% 16%

Lack ofresources

Hiring qualifiedteachers/staff

Coordinating/collaborating

with eligible providers

Lack of clear expectations/standards

for school readinessSource: NSBA Survey, 2006

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Pew-CPE initiative

• Making the case for pre-kindergarten

• Intensifying efforts in Kansas, Ohio and Texas

• Reaching out broadly to other states and nationally

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What the research says about pre-K

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Poor children start school behind their more affluent peers academically …

Source: NCES, America’s Kindergartners, Class of 1998-99, February 2000

8 7 6

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… and socially

Source: NCES, America’s Kindergartners, Class of 1998-99, February 2000

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The benefits of pre-k convey to all children

Source: Cannon & Karoly, Who Is Ahead and Who Is Behind? RAND, 2007. Data from Gormley et al, 2005.

0.99

0.38

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Page 25: Many Happy Returns: Why school boards should care about Pre-K

The benefits of pre-k convey to all children

Source: Cannon & Karoly, Who Is Ahead and Who Is Behind? RAND, 2007. Data from Gormley et al, 2005.

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Short-term benefits

• More likely to score higher on math and

reading state tests in elementary school

• Less likely to be retained in grade

• Less likely to require special education

services

Sources: High Scopes/Perry Preschool, Abecedarian, Chicago Child-Parent Centers

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Long-term benefits

• More likely to earn high school diploma

• More likely to be employed

• More likely to earn high wages

• More likely to be home owners

• Less likely to be a teen parent

• Less likely to be involved in criminal justice

system

Sources: High Scopes/Perry Preschool, Abecedarian, Chicago Child-Parent Centers

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Pre-K is a gift that keeps on giving

40

5

45

15

28

60

27

65

49

67

0 100

earned over$20K at 40

owned home at27

graduated highschool

achieved basicor better at 14

IQ was over 90at age 5

with pre-k

without pre-k

Percent of individuals

SOURCE: The High/Scope Perry Preschool Study Through Age 40, Summary, Conclusions, and Frequently Asked Questions, November 2004

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And it adds up:Gains per $1 invested

2.363.78

7.14

16.14

0

18

Meta-analysis Abecedarian Chicago Centers High/Scope

SOURCE: CED, 2006

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Savings to K-12 in Wisconsin

• 68 cents per dollar invested in pre-K for 4-yr-olds statewide

• 76 cents per dollar invested in Milwaukee alone

SOURCE: An economic analysis of four-year-old kindergarten in Wisconsin: Returns to the education system, PreK Now, Washington, DC, September 2005.

Savings in special ed placements, less grade retention, higher teacher retention, fewer substitutes, school safety.

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Access to pre-k varies by race & ethnicity

Per

cen

t of

4

year

-old

s

Source: NCES, Pre:school: First findings, Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Birth Cohort Follow up, 2007

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37 31

55

29

725

19

6

31

0

100

White Black Hispanic Asian NativeAmerican

center-based Head Start

60 62

50

61 60

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Access to pre-k also varies by family income

Per

cen

t of

4

year

-old

s

Source: NCES, Pre:school: First findings, Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, Birth Cohort Follow up, 2007

22

44

7125

13

1

0

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lowest 20% middle 60% highest 20%

center-based Head Start

47

57

72

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High-quality pre-k is NOT

High pressure

Mandatory

Low-quality/concerned

only with access

Academic only

One size fits all

Only in schools

Closed to parents

A silver bullet

High-quality pre-k IS

Fun – “can I go to pre-K?”

Concerned with children’s social/emotional/academic development

For all plus more for high-needs children

Often in diverse settings

Welcoming to parents too

Absolutely voluntary

Essential but not sufficient

Adapted from Pew Charitable Trusts, 2006

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State trends -- pre-k access

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Access

• 38 states fund pre-k programs

• 20% of all 4-yr-olds enrolled in state pre-k – up from 14% in 2002

• 2/3 of children served are in public school settings

Source: NIEER, 2006

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More state dollars for pre-k

FY 2005 FY 2008

# of states increasing pre-k funding

15 36

Total state pre-k dollars $2.9 billion $4.8 billion

Source: Pre-K Now, Votes Count 2007

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Pre-k funding by state, FY08

Orange: increase Black: decrease Tan: Flat

Blue: Inc, expected White: no state pre-k Gray: no budget

Map: Pre-K Now, Votes Count 2007

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Access to state pre-kFour-year-olds

Top States No program OK 70%

GA 52%

VT 47%

FL 47%

TX 44%

WV 40%

WI 32%

SC 31%

MD 31%

KY 29%

AK NH

HI ND

ID RI

IN SD

MS UT

MT WY

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4-yr-olds in state pre-k

Map: NIEER State Preschool Yearbook, 2006

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Wisconsin access

Wisconsin Nat’l average

Top state

4-yr-olds in state pre-k

32% 20% 70%

OK

4-yr-olds in Head Start

9% 11% 36%

MS

Per child spending

$3,108 $3,482 $9,854

NJ

Source: NIEER, 2006

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State trends -- pre-k quality

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NIEER’s 10 quality indicators• Early learning standards• Lead teachers with B.A.• Lead teachers with early ed training• Ass’t teachers with CDA• Min. 15 hrs PD• Max. class size of 20• Min. staff-child ratio 1:10• Health support• Min. 1 meal• Site visits

Source: National Institute for Early Education Research

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States meeting standards

• 2 states – AL and NC -- meet all 10 indicators

• 30 require a 1:10 staff-child ratio

• 28 have a max class size of 20

• 28 require early ed training

• 18 require BAs

Source: NIEER, 2006

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Wisconsin state requirements4K programs

• Early learning standards

• Lead teacher with BA

• Early ed training

• 15 hrs professional development

• Site visits

Source: NIEER, 2006

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Wisconsin state requirementsHead Start

• Early learning standards

• Early ed training

• Max. class size of 20

• Staff-child ratio 1:10

• Health screening

• Min. one meal

Source: NIEER, 2006

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A federal role

Page 47: Many Happy Returns: Why school boards should care about Pre-K

NSBA’s Pre-K Legislative Committee

• Advocates for federal pre-k agenda to include more investment in high-quality pre-k

• Includes over 300 NA, FRN and CUBE representatives at present

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NSBA’s Federal Policy Recommendations

• New federal grant program to fund portion of costs to develop and expand voluntary quality preschool programs in local school districts.

• Key caveats:

– School district participation discretionary– Parent/student participation discretionary– Not at expense of K-12 funding– Doesn’t foster vouchers

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NSBA’s Federal Policy Recommendations (cont.)

• Programs adopt developmentally appropriate early ed standards aligned with state’s K-12 standards.

• Require outside pre-k providers to collaborate with local districts.

• Encourage states to upgrade teacher certification / licensure systems to include BA & early ed training

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NSBA’s Federal Policy Recommendations (cont.)

• Devote resources to districts to develop / implement joint training and professional development programs for early ed instructors.

• Tools / incentives to replicate effective models and improve program quality.

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questions?

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For more information …

• Center for Public Education www.centerforpubliceducation.org

• Pre-K Legislative Committee www.nsba.org

• Pew Charitable Trusts www.pewtrusts.org

• Pre-K Now www.preknow.org

• National Affiliate Program www.nsba.org