Aaron Loewenberg
Senior Policy Analyst, Early & Elementary Education
A recent report emphasizes the positives of high access and funding, while acknowledging that work remains to be done to improve instructional quality
Washington, DC has long been a leader in early education access. DC was the site of a in 1964 and, , became one of the country鈥檚 first jurisdictions to make pre-K programs available to four-year-olds.
Today, DC continues to be a leader across the nation when it comes to educating young children. In fact, of the district鈥檚 four-year-olds and 64 percent of its three-year-olds attend publicly funded pre-K in a public school, public charter school, or community-based organization, making it number one in pre-K access in comparison to the fifty states. In all, about 13,000 children receive pre-K services in the District. DC also spends more on pre-K than all fifty states: $16,431 per child, about three and a half times more than of $4,521. This funding, which includes a blending of per-pupil funding and Head Start funds, helps pay for full-day pre-K classes led by licensed teachers with bachelor鈥檚 degrees.
A from the DC Office of the State Superintendent of Education (OSSE) emphasizes the positives of high levels of access and funding, but also acknowledges that work remains to ensure all pre-kindergarteners receive a high-quality education that prepares them for future academic and life success.
The OSSE report reveals that the quality of pre-K instruction needs attention. By utilizing the evaluation tool as a measure of program quality, the researchers were able to see how DC teachers are doing in three domains: emotional support, classroom organization, and instructional support (see the below graphic explaining the domains).
Source: OSSE Pre-K Report
While DC鈥檚 pre-K teachers are exceeding the in the domains of 聽emotional support and classroom organization, they are falling short in the area of instructional support (see below). This means that many pre-K students likely attend programs in which teachers do not consistently encourage students to use higher-order thinking skills, provide feedback that expands learning, or use to encourage conversation.
Source: OSSE Pre-K Report
Many pre-K programs in DC are working to improve the instructional support offered by teachers through strategies such as establishing an instructional coaching model and creating opportunities for peer collaboration among teachers. One philanthropic organization, , is working to improve the quality of DC pre-K programs through – a program that targets school leaders.
Launched in 2013, Joe鈥檚 Champs decided to specifically target principals because many felt limited in their understanding of early childhood education. This lack of knowledge can giving instructional guidance to pre-K teachers at their schools (a finding reinforced in our principal focus groups). Since DC principals for evaluating teachers and providing feedback to improve teaching it鈥檚 all the more important for elementary school principals to have the foundational ECE knowledge necessary to fairly evaluate and offer advice to pre-K teachers.
Joe鈥檚 Champs provides ongoing professional development for principals while also using a mentor coaching model to help principals gain a better understanding of topics such as child development, age-appropriate teaching strategies, and the impact of childhood trauma. 聽According to Fight for Children鈥檚 , 13 DC schools are currently enrolled in Joe鈥檚 Champs and three schools are piloting a preK-3rd grade alignment effort as the next phase of Joe鈥檚 Champs. Joe鈥檚 Champs boasts a network of 55 leaders that receive 80 hours of professional development and coaching each year.
To measure the impact of the program, Fight for Children utilizes the same CLASS assessment that is used to measure all DC pre-K programs. As mentioned earlier, many DC programs seem to struggle in the area of instructional support. Schools that partner with Joe鈥檚 Champs, however, have a three-year growth rate of 28 percent on instructional support scores compared to an average growth rate in DC of 17 percent. These numbers suggest Joe鈥檚 Champs is an effective intervention for supporting instructional quality.
While DC is doing a lot of things right when it comes to pre-K, especially in terms of access, the OSSE report makes clear that work remains to be done when it comes to supporting teachers in improving their instructional quality. It may seem strange that a program such as Joe鈥檚 Champs targets principals as a means of improving the instruction of teachers. But in order for elementary schools to be sites of high-quality early education it鈥檚 imperative that principals serve as in their schools. Only when school leaders possess an in-depth understanding of what high-quality teaching looks like at the pre-K and early elementary level can they support teachers in instructing in the ways young children learn best.