NPR: What exactly is ‘High-Quality’ Preschool?
Part of a weeklong series, NPR’s Caudio Sanchez explores what ‘high-quality’ pre-kindergarten is.
Read the article here: http://www.npr.org/2014/04/22/304563233/what-exactly-is-high-quality-preschool
Part of a weeklong series, NPR’s Caudio Sanchez explores what ‘high-quality’ pre-kindergarten is.
Read the article here: http://www.npr.org/2014/04/22/304563233/what-exactly-is-high-quality-preschool
By Celinda Lake and Christine Matthews
It’s election season in Pennsylvania. And unless you haven’t turned on the television or radio, picked up a paper or logged on to almost any website, you’ve been hearing candidates talk a lot about jobs and education.
What they say about early childhood education, however, might seem pretty vague. Given what we see in the polling we’ve done in Pennsylvania, and the prominent attention pre-k has gotten in other high-profile races around the country, that shouldn’t be the case.
It was a central issue in the recent New York City mayor’s race, and it’s a simmering one in the hotly contested race for governor in Texas. Why now? And why in such very different political environments?
Pennsylvania voters believe pre-k can improve a child’s social skills, which helps them through grade school. They see the long-term benefits in terms of better test scores, graduation rates, and lifetime earnings and employment.
And voters are right: The proven benefits of pre-k, both short and long-term – for kids, for schools and for the economic benefits – are indisputable. The results in the many states that have implemented universal pre-k stand as a significant piece of evidence, as does decades of research by experts in early childhood education.
The political consensus around high-quality pre-k nationally may also reflect what our research in Pennsylvania tells us: there is broad bi-partisan support for pre-k. In all, 83 percent of Democrats, 61 percent of Independents and 56 percent of Republicans favor ensuring every 3- and 4-year-old in Pennsylvania has access to voluntary, high-quality pre-k programs.
In fact, a majority of Pennsylvania likely voters (59 percent) see the benefit as so clear that they support increased state funding for such programs. Pennsylvania voters, like those in many other states, recognize the results justify the investment.
In an important election year, something else stood out in our research: Pennsylvania voters say they are more likely to vote for candidates for elected office if they favored increasing funding for pre-k programs, and less likely to vote for those who opposed increasing funding.
Right now, only 1 in 6 of Pennsylvania’s 3- and 4-year-olds has access to high-quality pre-k. Candidates for governor and other offices on the ballot in this election cycle might benefit from recognizing an issue with clear, broad public support that is bolstered by scientific research and the experience of other states. If they don’t follow the lead of states that are succeeding in this approach, perhaps they might follow the will of the voters in Pennsylvania.
More information about the Lake/Bellwether survey can be found by clicking here. Celinda Lake is president of Lake Research Partners and Christine Matthews is president of Bellwether Research and Consulting.
The Philadelphia Inquirer: guest column by David L. Cohen
“It’s not always the case that the business and education sectors are in full agreement on what’s needed to improve the quality of education and skills of our students. But when it comes to prekindergarten, the stars are fully aligned.”
Read more at http://www.philly.com/philly/opinion/inquirer/20140418_Pa__needs_quality_pre-K.html#x1hJUhVzZkwBZRds.99
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Investment in pre-k is “educational, societal, moral imperative,” says David L Cohen of @Comcast, citing @PreK4PA http://t.co/9XoXALMzsv
— Pre-K for PA (@PreK4PA) April 18, 2014
Statewide partners of the Pre-K for PA campaign have invited all PA gubernatorial candidates to participate in site visits of early education centers. At the visits, representatives from the military, law enforcement and business communities will discuss the beneficial impact of high-quality pre-k on school readiness, workforce development, crime prevention and national security.
Participants will visit the pre-k classrooms and read to children. Local early childhood providers will discuss unmet need data for early learning services in the lower Susquehanna Valley. Pre-K for PA is a non-partisan issue education campaign supported by more than 2,200 individuals and organizations across Pennsylvania who believe that investing in our children is the right choice and an urgent necessity. The campaign is working to educate candidates and the public on the importance of high-quality pre-k.
Pre-K for PA neither endorses nor opposes candidates, but rather advocates on behalf of its vision for Pennsylvania’s children, schools and communities. All Pennsylvania gubernatorial candidates have been invited to attend pre-k classroom visits by the campaign.
Confirmed site visits (as of 4/15):
Site visits are organized by Mission:Readiness. Contact: Steve Doster, 717-343-6403 or sdoster@missionreadiness.org.
Kids Can’t Vote (Facebook)
Kids Can’t Vote (Twitter)
KIDS CAN’T VOTE, but you can. Apr 21 is last day to register to vote for PA primary. http://t.co/cItjB3ZPt4 #pagov pic.twitter.com/4KF8yGEkng
— Pre-K for PA (@PreK4PA) April 14, 2014