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We Can Scale High-Quality Public Pre-K鈥擟an We Scale Effective Legislating?

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Progressive Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis states should be seen as “laboratories鈥 of democracy suited for conducting 鈥渘ovel social and economic experiments.鈥 Ever since, his insight has been used to support states’ efforts to try reform policies tailored to meet their populations’ diverse needs.

, many states鈥斺攈ave been taking that role seriously when it comes to pre-K policy. While skeptics have stymied federal action by arguing that high-quality pre-K programs are too difficult to scale beyond intense, 鈥渂outique鈥 pre-K programs like the famous Perry Project, officials in Boston, Oklahoma, and (among other places) have gone ahead and expanded their programs anyway.

Yesterday, in a small meeting room in the bowels of the U.S. Capitol, experts summarized research showing that these efforts are, in fact, substantially improving student academic outcomes. The event, organized by the Society for Research in Child Development, was pegged to a recent research brief on new pre-K studies, 鈥

http://www.srcd.org/policy-media/policy-updates/meetings-briefings/investing-our-future-evidence-base-preschool

鈥 (国产视频 held last fall).

Georgetown’s Deborah Phillips, NYU’s Hirokazu Yoshikawa, and the University of Michigan’s Christina Weiland covered the brief’s findings. Analysis of Tulsa, Oklahoma鈥檚 program, for instance, showed academic benefits through third grade (and further research is planned to check for impacts at eighth grade). The effects were particularly strong for the math scores of boys and students who qualified for federal free- and reduced- price lunch.

The results are similarly good in Boston. The study found that pre-K helped all children, but was particularly helpful in several cases. It “closed the school readiness gap among poor and non-poor children in mathematics,” and eliminated early reading and math gaps between Latino and White children.

Boston Public Schools鈥 Jason Sachs and the Community Action Project of Tulsa鈥檚 Steven Dow offered some background on the history of the programs. Interestingly, both identified the competition between school-based and community-based pre-K providers as a particularly challenging issue. Sachs and Down noted that many community-based child care providers have long used the resources that come with serving four-year-olds to cover the cost of serving relatively more expensive infants and toddlers. As public, school-based pre-K has covered more four-year-olds in Oklahoma and Boston, this has 鈥渃rowded out鈥 child care providers from that market鈥攚hich is undercutting their ability to serve younger children as well.

Both sites are piloting programs to address 鈥渃rowd out.鈥 In Oklahoma, the state, in conjunction with the George Kaiser Family Foundation, has (since 2006) to support birth to three programs across the state. In Boston, the city is piloting a pre-K expansion that would incorporate community-based providers鈥攁nd double public pre-K capacity within four years.

By the end of the event, I started to wonder: if we know that high-quality public pre-K investments make a huge difference in students鈥 lives, but we still can鈥檛 convince skeptics at the federal level, perhaps we鈥檝e been thinking about laboratories of democracy all wrong. At this point, we have more than enough evidence that . That experiment works. Congress should expand it, and they should do it yesterday.

What policy folks need now, though, is to figure out how to scale effective legislating. How are states like Oklahoma able to take evidence and translate it into policy? Can we scale this approach at the federal level? ? Research suggests that the could work: the real question is whether Congress can function well enough to put them in place.

More 国产视频 the Authors

Conor P. Williams
We Can Scale High-Quality Public Pre-K鈥擟an We Scale Effective Legislating?