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In Short

Kindergarten Access and Quality: A Look at the Leading States

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It鈥檚 surprising that even today some children around the country don鈥檛 have access to free, full-day kindergarten. When young kids have access to high-quality full-day kindergarten programs, they have a聽greater opportunity聽to build the developmental and academic skills needed for the later grades and beyond. And, as more children have access to聽, it only makes sense to continue to offer students full-day programs as they transition to kindergarten. In addition, a full-day program gives teachers the opportunity for more聽聽in the classroom.

In a recently released聽report聽from 国产视频鈥檚 Early & Elementary Education Policy team, we ranked all 50 states and the District of Columbia on聽聽in seven policy areas that foster children鈥檚 literacy skills for third grade reading proficiency. We grouped states into three categories– crawling, toddling, or walking–based on whether or not states met our policy indicators. One of the policy areas that we analyzed was full-day kindergarten.

In our analysis, we reviewed access to and quality of full-day kindergarten within each state across four key policy indicators. We did not review whether states had chosen developmentally-appropriate curriculum or instructional strategies, but we did consider whether states have a聽, a minimum length of day that was equivalent to first grade, a ban on charging tuition for full-day programs, and a district requirement to offer full-day kindergarten. 聽

Shockingly, only 12 states (most of them in the south) require their school districts by statute to provide full-day kindergarten. Two additional states (Washington and Rhode Island) are in the process of transitioning to statewide full-day kindergarten programs. As of 2014,聽聽do not require kindergarten attendance at all. Without the requirement in statute for districts to offer kindergarten, particularly full-day programs, kindergarten becomes vulnerable particularly when local budgets are constricted. For instance, in Massachusetts, funding for many of the state鈥檚 full-day kindergarten programs was in jeopardy this past summer after the governor made a line item budget veto that was聽.聽 聽聽

Even in the districts that do offer full-day K, it鈥檚 not always a true full-day of learning. In other words, only 27 states set a standard for the length of full-day K (when it鈥檚 offered) that is equivalent to first grade. In several more states, districts may offer full-day programs聽that range from four to seven hours. And, when districts offer half-day kindergarten, children could spend as little as 2.5 hours per day learning, even less when you factor in transitions between activities.

More than 10 states allow districts to charge families tuition for their children to attend full-day kindergarten in a public school. These policies limit equitable access to full-day kindergarten programs. While some districts do not charge tuition to low-income families or use a sliding scale based on family income, that is not guaranteed. Kindergarten should be seen as an essential grade for a child鈥檚 development and academic career, but in most state statutes it is not. 聽聽聽

The map below shows the top 11 states that stood out in our scan for having policies that support greater access to full-day kindergarten programs. Many of these states rose to the top for requiring full-day kindergarten that is equivalent in length to first grade as well as banning tuition for full-day programs, both essential policy levers for allowing students and families to have equal access to full-day kindergarten. (To learn more about how individual states perform according to our policy indicators, check out our data analysis tool,聽.)

Kindergarten Access and Quality: A Look at the Leading States
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In our scan of full-day kindergarten, almost half of the states were 鈥渨alking鈥 and most of the rest were 鈥渃rawling.鈥 Alabama and North Carolina met every indicator that we tracked in this policy area. However, our indicators, did not include measures of classroom environment, per-pupil funding, or instructional quality. Even in Alabama and North Carolina, there is work to be done. It鈥檚 worth noting, that North Carolina is one state that has made 聽a focus, particularly in teaching and learning.聽

As state legislative sessions continue, policymakers and state education leaders should make kindergarten a priority by creating policies to ensure that every child has access to a free, high-quality, full-day program. After all, without a strong follow-up to pre-K, it will be much more difficult to 聽sustain 聽the learning gains made in earlier years. “

More 国产视频 the Authors

Shayna Cook

Policy Analyst, Early & Elementary Education

Kindergarten Access and Quality: A Look at the Leading States