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Embattled AZ Schools Chief Was Major Opponent of Full-Day Kindergarten

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As Arizona Superintendent of Public Instruction, John Huppenthal, has become over his , it is worth noting that Huppenthal was a central figure in our story of full-day kindergarten in Arizona: .

Though Huppenthal carried out his online antagonism anonymously — a choice, claims, he made because he worried his 鈥減osition as an elected official would influence the dialog鈥 (sic) — his opposition to the passage of then-Governor Janet Napolitano鈥檚 full-day kindergarten plan in 2003 and 2004 was well-known. Huppenthal was then a state Senator, and his regular emphasis on the so-called 鈥渇ade-out effect鈥 in research on the effects of full-day kindergarten influenced many of his fellow legislators. As we say in the brief:

As one representative recalled to in 2006, 鈥淪en. Huppenthal, on [a] consistent basis, points out that the other children can catch up with all-day kindergarten kids by the third or fourth grade.鈥 Huppenthal鈥檚 opposition shaped the debate over the original passage of full-day kindergarten in important ways. As Hargrove explains, 鈥淪everal interviewees referred to Sen. Huppenthal and the research he cited to refute or question the merit of full-day kindergarten, as a major obstacle to the passage of full-day kindergarten legislation in Arizona.

As we note in our account of the fate of Arizona鈥檚 full-day kindergarten program, while it overcame the opposition of Huppenthal and his colleagues in the short term — the plan passed in May 2004 — Huppenthal鈥檚 position ultimately won out when Napolitano鈥檚 successor, Jan Brewer, signed a bill rescinding all state funding for full-day kindergarten. Huppenthal, along with all but one of his Republican colleagues in the state House and Senate and no Democrats, for the cut before it got to the Governor鈥檚 desk. Public interest in full-day kindergarten seems not to have subsided with the passage of the funding cut, as a debate during the election for Superintendent of Public Instruction a few months later asked candidates their opinions on the policy. Huppenthal again registered his dubiousness of full-day kindergarten:


In the midst of the controversy over Huppenthal鈥檚 anonymous online commenting habits, it鈥檚 worth remembering the influence of Huppenthal鈥檚 public comments, too. And in Arizona鈥檚 full-day kindergarten, it鈥檚 been huge.

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CJ Libassi

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Embattled AZ Schools Chief Was Major Opponent of Full-Day Kindergarten