WJET: New funding allows more Erie County children to participate in pre-K

WJET: New funding allows more Erie County children to participate in pre-K

WJET: New funding allows more Erie County children to participate in pre-K

October 4, 2016

ERIE, Pa. – The pre-K classroom at Iroquois Elementary School is a little bigger thanks to a $25 million investment in programs across the Commonwealth.

New state funding allows 200 additional children in Erie County to participate in pre-K with 30 of those children at Iroquois.

On Tuesday, the school celebrated the growing classroom.

Studies show that not only is the program important for education, but it helps to reduce disruptive or antisocial behaviors in children that could lead to criminal behavior.

In Erie County, 2,400 students living below the poverty line to not have access to pre-K.

Watch coverage here.

WJET: New funding allows more Erie County children to participate in pre-K

Reading Eagle: Berks County Sees a Boost for Pre-k Education

Reading Eagle: Berks County Sees a Boost for Pre-k Education
October 1, 2016 by David Mekeel

Seventeen sets of tiny hands grasped a long, blue ribbon, a bow at its center, and stretched it across their classroom.

The 3- and 4-year-olds were flanked by a group of grown-ups, smiling as pictures were snapped. At the count of three, four of the small children who had been given red and black safety scissors snipped away, making the opening of their new pre-kindergarten classroom official.

The Berks County Intermediate Unit on Friday celebrated the addition of seven new pre-k classrooms that have opened up across Berks County this school year with a special event at the BCIU Education Center along Centre Avenue. The new classrooms are the result of a $30 million increase in this year’s state budget for early childhood education.

Before the ribbon-cutting – and before state Sen. Judy Schwank sat down to read the kids a couple of stories – local and state officials gathered for a roundtable discussion about pre-k funding.

The discussion was led by Bruce Clash, state director of Fight Crime: Invest in Kids Pennsylvania. The group, which is made up of 160 district attorneys, police chiefs and sheriffs, pushes for increased funding for early childhood education.

The goal of the group, according to Clash, is to make sure every child in the state has access to high-quality pre-kindergarten.”We’re here today to celebrate that we’re taking a chip out of that need,” he said.

Clash said the $30 million increase in state funding this year opened up pre-k opportunities for 4,000 kids across the commonwealth. But, he added, the need hasn’t gone away.

In Berks County alone, more than 4,800 children living 300 percent below the poverty line still don’t have access to pre-k. That number represents 76 percent of the children in the county currently living at that poverty level.

The fight to change the situation is a long, often frustrating one, Clash said.

“We all have flat spots on the side of our heads from beating them against the wall,” he told the group gathered around the table.

The funding increase, however, is at least a start.”

There are real little ones here,” Cheri Woyurka, BCIU director of early childhood and student services, said with a smile. “We have lots of little bodies in this building.

“Woyurka said the new state money allowed the BCIU to more than double its number of Pre-K Counts classrooms, going from six to 13. This year they’re serving 283 children at sites throughout the county.

And that’s a big deal.

As Al Ottinger, president of QIC Inc., a precision castings manufacturer in Blandon, explained, early childhood education opportunities lead to a better prepared workforce.

Ottinger attended Friday’s event as a representative of the business community. And, he said, that community is willing and eager to help get kids off on the right foot.

“The most compelling number is that you get a $17 return for every dollar you invest in pre-k,” he said.

Ottinger said today’s workforce is facing a shortage of skilled workers, especially in technology fields. To change that, he said, will require bolstering education.

Early childhood education also has an impact on the criminal justice system, Berks County District Attorney John T. Adams said.”This is sort of a crime prevention tool for us,” he said.

“Just exposing kids to a good start goes a long way to investing in their future.

“Adams said many of the criminals he comes across share a common shortcoming – namely, education.

Clash added that about half of all inmates in state prisons in Pennsylvania don’t have a high school diploma. Early education could help keep many students from following that path.

“All those things that lead to productive citizenship begin right here,” Clash said.

Schwank agreed, saying it’s hearing from people like Adams and Ottinger – along with visiting classrooms – that help make it so easy for her to support early education funding.

Read the full article here.

WJET: New funding allows more Erie County children to participate in pre-K

Delaware County Daily Times: Pre-K programs create better citizens, advocates say

Delaware County Daily Times: Pre-K programs create better citizens, advocates say

September 29, 2016 by Kevin Tustin

Clifton Heights >> The need for pre-kindergarten programs in relation to the criminal justice system was the focus of a roundtable discussion Thursday morning.

Delaware County District Attorney Jack Whelan and state Sen. Tom McGarrigle, R-26 of Springfield, met with leaders of Today’s Child Learning Center in Clifton Heights and local and state pre-K advocates to reinforce why access to these high-quality, public early education programs in the state are needed to create better citizens.

As a way of being proactive in fighting recidivism, Whelan said district attorneys are looking at the defectiveness of an incarcerated person’s educational background to deter young people from getting involved in the penal system.

“If given the opportunity that we can address these needs at the pre-K level, the expectation would be that they would not be at the point in life that they’re at when they are in the state system,” said Whelan. “If we can start from the back end looking from the front end and being able to reduce people getting involved in crime, education is a big part of that.”

The state currently spends about $2.6 billion on its corrections system for 50,000 inmates, many of whom Whelan noted have no formal education, if a high school diploma.

“It’s critically important. It’s labor intensive, it is cost intensive, but the payout over the long-term I think more than amply makes up for what it is we’re trying to fund now,” said President and CEO of the United Way of Greater Philadelphia and Southern New Jersey Jim Cawley.

Compared to the $50,000 the state spends per incarcerated person, pre-K programs are reported to return a profit of nearly $30,000 to the community for every child served by way of saving on student retention costs, special education costs and, ultimately, incarceration costs.

Funding has increased for pre-K programs in the state under Gov. Tom Wolf, jumping $120 million in two years for Pre-K Counts and Head Start Supplemental.

The boost in money has allowed Today’s Child to add 40 students this year alone to their highest-rated program in four locations, many of whom are in the Colwyn center.

Erinn Rinn, community relations coordinator for Today’s Child, gave feedback on the benefits that the Pre-K Counts program has been afforded to students.

“We talk with the kindergarten teachers and those teachers tell us themselves that the children who come from our programs are ready and more ready for the children who are not in this program and they succeed later on, K-through-12,” said Rinn.

Teachers at Today’s Child have degrees in early childhood education.

The state’s guidelines and mandates for selecting students for prioritizing applicants includes income levels, single-parent households, English as a second learning and even health.

Read the full article here.

New Pittsburgh Courier: County, Regional Officials Celebrate New Pre-k Classrooms in Homewood

New Pittsburgh Courier: County, Regional Officials Celebrate New Pre-k Classrooms in Homewood

New Pittsburgh Courier: County, Regional Officials Celebrate New Pre-k Classrooms in Homewood

By Stephan Broadus 9/20/2016

Pittsburgh, Pa. – Local and state officials helped mark the expansion of a pre-kindergarten classroom at YWCA of Greater Pittsburgh’s Homewood-Brushton Child Development and Education Center on Sept. 19.

The expansion of high-quality pre-k was made possible by the infusion of an additional $25 million in funding for Pennsylvania Pre-K Counts and $5 million for the Head Start Supplemental Assistance Program as part of the 2016-17 state budget. Early learning providers in Allegheny County received new state funding to serve more than 400 additional children in the current school year. Pre-K Counts and the Head Start State Supplemental are the primary state funding sources for high-quality pre-k in Pennsylvania.

Cara Ciminillo, executive director of the Pittsburgh Association for the Education of Young Children, said the region’s new pre-k classrooms are a step in the right direction, but noted access to high-quality pre-k in Allegheny County remains a challenge. “Only 42 percent of income eligible 3- and 4-year-olds have access to publicly-funded high-quality pre-k in the county. This equates to more than 7,300 income eligible three- and four-year-olds still lacking access to publicly-funded high-quality pre-k every year,” Ciminillo said.

Statewide, more than 120,000 3- and 4-year-olds—or 69 percent of all eligible young learners—are missing out on publicly-funded, high-quality pre-k each year. This lack of access is especially troubling considering the proven benefits it has for children, schools and communities. A large body of research shows children who benefit from high-quality pre-k:

Enter kindergarten with stronger literacy, language, math and social/emotional skills;
Are less likely to need special education services, less likely to repeat grades, and more likely to graduate and enroll in college.

Over a lifetime, these young learners will see stronger employment opportunities and increased earning potential, and they are less likely to commit juvenile and adult crimes.

Allegheny County Sheriff William Mullen stressed the role high-quality pre-k plays in reducing disruptive or anti-social behaviors that, if unaddressed, can lead to delinquent and criminal behavior. Mullen noted research compiled by the anti-crime organization Fight Crime: Invest In Kids showing that at-risk kids who attend high-quality early learning programs are dramatically less likely to commit crime and more likely to graduate from high school.

“A review of Pennsylvania’s state inmate population reveals that more than 50 percent of inmates have not graduated from high school,” said Mullen. “This revealing statistic is more reason for the imperative that law enforcement leaders place on educational success, which is best achieved by children getting a strong early educational foundation.”

Sheriff Mullen added: “Independent cost-benefit analyses show that high-quality pre-k can return, on average, net benefits to society of nearly $30,000 for every child served. These benefits accrue largely due to reductions in the cost of future crime and increases in participants’ future wages, as well as other costs such as children being held back in school or receiving special education services.”

Read the full article here.

WJET: New funding allows more Erie County children to participate in pre-K

WBRE: Invest in Kids!

WBRE: Invest in Kids!
By Jayne Ann Bugda
September 9, 2016

SELINSGROVE, SNYDER COUNTY (WBRE/WYOU) With the state budget passed this year – state funded pre-kindergarten classrooms are expanding.

On Friday, a ribbon cutting was held at the ‘Susquehanna Children’s Center’ in Selinsgrove.

Through a program called ‘Fight Crime: Invest in Kids’ — 25-million dollars in state funding will help enroll 3 and 4-year-olds into a pre-k class.

The goal is to lower crime in the future.

Watch video of the event here.

WJET: New funding allows more Erie County children to participate in pre-K

Courier Times: Pay now or pay later: Why pre-K is worth the cost

Courier Times: Pay now or pay later: Why pre-K is worth the cost

By BILL SHOFFLER
What if I were to tell you Harrisburg was considering a proven way to create jobs, reduce the number of people in jail, and save more tax dollars than it costs? What if it made it far less likely for 1,500 high-risk kids to go to jail?

You probably know that high quality pre-kindergarten prepares children so they’re ready to learn in school. Quality pre-K also provides a level of stability for working families, especially those struggling to go to work and absorb the cost of child care in their family budgets, making them more reliable employees and more effective parents.

But what if I told you quality pre-K also reduces criminal behavior and saves millions of tax dollars in fewer incarcerated people? It does. And that’s what makes it a great solution.

There is no shortage of studies on children at high risk of failing in school. These studies examine the effects of early learning experiences on 3- and 4-year olds and measure things like cognitive development and retention, socialization skills, school readiness, drop out rates, health, and success later in life, among many other things.
These studies have proven that quality pre-K bridges the achievement gaps of minority students in math and literacy and greatly reduces the need for special education instruction, lowers the costs involved in drop-outs, all of which saves tax dollars and improves the learning environment for every student in the class.

Interestingly, some studies show the academic advantages that quality pre-K gives students over their non-pre-K peers actually levels out by third or fourth grade. While the research doesn’t tell us exactly why this is, there is reason to believe maintaining the powerful learning trajectory fostered by pre-K isn’t sustainable for schools that have to mostly focus on students who just aren’t ready to learn. In the meantime, the dividends of pre-K continue to grow.

Children who have had quality pre-K relate to their peers and teachers better and are far less likely to have social or self control issues. The research also shows that social skills learned in pre-school are sustained throughout the school years and into adulthood. These are the skills that account for the extremely large reductions in criminal behavior and incarceration rates in the teen years and later.

Pennsylvania currently houses more than 50,000 prisoners in state correctional facilities at a cost of $2 billion every year. That’s an annual per prisoner cost of $40,000, or, $10,000 more than the average per capita (not household) income in the commonwealth. It is more than four times what the state spends per student for one year in public school. And, with Bucks County’s DelVal University tuition coming in at around $37,000, it’s more than it would cost to send a kid to a private college.

And that’s only the $2 billion in incarceration costs to the state. There are also related county and municipal costs, let alone the systems that support prisons, including police, sheriffs, judges, lawyers, social workers, psychologists and health care workers, etc.

Finally, consider the cost of lost opportunity, which taxpayers bear, including not having a productive citizen earning the media per capita income and paying taxes.

The PreK for PA Campaign is asking the Legislature and governor for $90 million to fund 2016-17 pre-kindergarten programs in Pennsylvania. The $90 million will get 7,200 more at risk 3- and 4-year olds from low-income families into quality pre-K.

Read the full column here.