Dayton Daily News

Preschool Promise's gains are 'significan­t'

Recap: Program must add families, close racial gaps.

- By Jeremy P. Kelley | Staff Writer

Students enrolled in the local Preschool Promise effort made “significan­t gains in school readiness” in 2017-18, but the program is still struggling to attract more families and close racial achievemen­t gaps, a preliminar­y 2017-18 recap of work in Dayton and Kettering shows.

Twenty-six of the 73 participat­ing schools and centers improved their “star rating” in Ohio’s Step Up to Quality system last year, and student scores on the Bracken evaluation increased noticeably from fall 2017 to spring 2018.

But 28 percent of Dayton 4-year-olds attended no preschool at all last year, despite thousands of dollars in available tuition support.

Since 2017-18 was the first year of the fully funded program, Preschool Promise board chair

Deborah Feldman said the team will use this as baseline data to inform next steps. She said the group is “very pleased” with early student gains and commended local preschools and partners for their hard work to improve quality.

“We are committed to addressing the racial gaps and to finding new ways to reach families who aren’t yet sending their children to preschool,” Feldman said. “We will keep working hard to make sure all of our children can attend high-quality programs.”

Dayton voters in 2016 approved a 0.25 percent income tax hike, with $4.3 million per year of those funds going to Preschool Promise. The agency uses the tax money for family tuition assistance and preschool staff training in Dayton, expanding on efforts started by Montgomery County. Research suggests high-quality preschool produces academic gains for low-income students.

Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley said she is “really, really pleased” with the first full year, especially with the organizati­on’s “high standards for themselves,” and willingnes­s to adjust approaches based on what they learn, with no ego or politics.

Preschool Promise has focused the past two years on racial achievemen­t gaps, as black children continue to start school academical­ly behind and struggle to make up ground as years go on.

The agency uses the Bracken assessment to measure preschoole­rs’ basic letter/number/shape-type knowledge and the Minnesota EFS for their “executive function” or ability to control behavior, follow instructio­ns and work with others.

From fall to spring in 201718, Preschool Promise 4-yearolds improved their scores on both tests, narrowly missing the national average on the overall Bracken score, and exceeding it on one subtest. But the gap between white and black students’ scores increased in that time, narrowly on the Bracken and significan­tly on the MEFS.

The report said teacher training has been very effective, and Robyn Lightcap, executive director of Preschool Promise, said students made “more than an expected year’s gain” last year on the Bracken assessment.

“The good news is that everyone’s going up (on Bracken), black kids and white kids, but we see that there’s still a really big gap, and we’re not, in general, closing that gap,” Lightcap said.

She said the Minnesota “executive function” test was worse, as black students made negligible gains on those skills, significan­tly widening the racial gap. She said Preschool Promise would consider a “radical increase in focus” on executive function training for teachers.

“We clearly have much more work to do ... making sure our African-American kids are getting the experience­s they need to develop those executive function skills,” Lightcap said. “Those skills are actually the best predictor of long-term success . ... I think we have to find something radical to address these racial inequities.”

There was also a racial gap in attendance, as 66 percent of white students had attendance of 90 percent or better, while 62 percent of black girls did, and only 52 percent of black boys. Families who signed up for the “star attendance” financial incentives have gotten kids to school more often.

Charmaine Webster, Preschool Promise’s director of marketing, said the group is restructur­ing its outreach team, including the imminent hiring of a full-time director. She cited recent stronger outreach to charter school families, and at underserve­d apartment complexes, adding the program hopes to see slight growth in participat­ion this year.

Webster said Preschool Promise has had some difficulty getting Hispanic families to register, with some unwilling to file paperwork while immigratio­n enforcemen­t has increased.

Lightcap said Preschool Promise has far more students actively attending programs than at this point last year. But she said that may only be due to a smoother enrollment process and agreed with Webster that only a small increase in actual enrollment was likely this year.

The program has listed a long-term goal of having 70 percent of eligible Dayton 4-year-olds enrolled. Lightcap said Preschool Promise will consider creative ways of improving enrollment, especially in East Dayton where numbers are low.

 ?? JEREMY P. KELLEY / STAFF ?? Students at Miami Valley Child Developmen­t Centers’ school on Horace Street in West Dayton do a science lesson using water, pepper and soap. Local Preschool Promise students’ scores on an evaluation increased noticeably from fall 2017 to spring 2018.
JEREMY P. KELLEY / STAFF Students at Miami Valley Child Developmen­t Centers’ school on Horace Street in West Dayton do a science lesson using water, pepper and soap. Local Preschool Promise students’ scores on an evaluation increased noticeably from fall 2017 to spring 2018.

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