California Gets Low Grades for Education
A from Children Now, a California-based children鈥檚 advocacy group, paints a dismal picture of how the state鈥檚 children are faring. Since 2006, Children Now reports, 100,000 additional California children have fallen into poverty, and 680,000 have lost health insurance provided by their parents鈥 employers. Further, at the very time that the state鈥檚 families need a strong safety net, a state fiscal crisis has brought about cuts to children鈥檚 health and education programs. In many cases, those cuts have further undermined programs and services that were already inadequate.
The state鈥檚 failure to care for, invest in, and educate them has serious negative implications for its future outlook. And since one in every eight American children lives in California, these shortcomings have national implications.
In its report, Children Now gives California鈥檚 early childhood programs a grade of 鈥淐,鈥 which, sad to say, is one of the higher grades the state receives. Although California suffers from a shortage of child care slots, some of the nation鈥檚 least affordable child care, and tremendous variation in the quality of early care and education programs, the state has also鈥攁s a recent 国产视频 Foundation report noted鈥攎ade progress in recent years to improve early care and education, even during tough budget times. California has passed legislation to consolidate and streamline its numerous preschool programs, maintained investments in 鈥淔irst 5鈥 programs that provide early learning and other services for young children and their families, established a State Advisory Council on Early Childhood Education and Care, and is taking steps towards implementing a Quality Rating and Improvement System for childcare providers. The challenge for the state now is to sustain and build on these investments. If California can keep moving forward, it has an opportunity to both improve outcomes for its youngest children and benefit from federal funds that may become available through the proposed Early Learning Challenge Grant program. But if the state鈥檚 policymakers don鈥檛 hold the line on early childhood investments, they could find themselves ineligible for the new federal funds.
Children Now gives the state gets its best rating for Afterschool Programs, based on the strength of its 鈥淧rop 49鈥 program, which providers state-funded after school for some 500,000 students statewide.
But the state gets its worst grade from Children Now for its K-12 education system. Fifty years ago, California had one of the nation鈥檚 best public education systems, but decades of underinvestment and poor policy choices have left the state鈥檚 public schools in dismal shape鈥攁nd with dismal results to show for it. California ranks 47th among the states in per-pupil education funding, and is at or near the bottom in student outcomes, too. And California鈥檚 schools have taken some of the hardest hits in the current economic crisis, with public education spending down 6% since the 2007-08 school year. To improve California鈥檚 dismal education system and outcomes, Children Now recommends: 1) revamping the state鈥檚 school finance system to make it more equitable, transparent, and provides sufficient resources to deliver a quality education; 2) recruiting, retaining and equitably distributing effective teachers for the state鈥檚 schools, and 3) building a comprehensive 鈥渃radle to career鈥 longitudinal student data system that could track students from preschool through higher ed and inform better education policy and practice in the state.
Early Ed Watch particularly appreciates the Children Now report鈥檚 emphasis on improving integration and alignment between the early childhood and K-12 education systems in the state. In some ways, it鈥檚 encouraging that California鈥檚 early childhood education system doesn鈥檛 rate as poorly as its public schools. But if children leave early childhood programs to go on to lousy public schools, the state鈥檚 early childhood investments will bear far less fruit than they ought to. Unfortunately, pre-K advocates and school reformers in the state have tended to operate on separate tracks鈥攔arely collaborating and with little understanding of one another鈥檚 worlds. That Children Now focuses on the need for reform in both early childhood and K-12 is clear step in the right direction.