The Denver Post

Learning from universal preschool

- By Ann Schimke Chalkbeat Colorado Chalkbeat Colorado is a nonprofit news organizati­on covering education issues. For more, visit co.chalkbeat.org.

When Colorado launches free preschool for 4-yearolds in 2023, it will join a half dozen other states that already offer universal preschool.

All of them have encountere­d the same tricky task Colorado leaders now face as they try to knit together a disparate patchwork of public and private preschools into an equitable and high-quality statewide system. We’ll take a look at some of the lessons learned in four states: Florida, Oklahoma, Vermont, and Wisconsin.

Some, like Oklahoma, have offered the program for decades, while others, like Vermont — one of the few places to offer free preschool to all 3- and 4-yearolds — have joined the club more recently. Wisconsin officials said they don’t consider their preschool program universal because school districts don’t have to offer the state-funded classes, though 99% do.

Colorado’s universal preschool program will offer 10 hours a week to all 4-yearolds, with children who have higher needs eligible for more. Funding will come from Colorado’s existing state-funded preschool program, which is for children from low-income families, or who have language delays, or other risk factors, and proceeds from a voter-approved nicotine tax.

In all four states, at least 70% of 4-year-olds participat­ed prior to the pandemic. Sherry Carlson, chief program officer at the Vermont advocacy group, Let’s Grow Kids, said the state’s system is not perfect, but “usage is an indication that we’re on the right track.”

The half-day problem

Colorado’s plan to offer 10 hours of preschool a week to most children is similar to preschool programs in states like Florida, Vermont, and Wisconsin. The problem is that halfday programs don’t work for a lot of families.

Professor Beth Graue, director of the Center for Research on Early Childhood Education at the University of Wisconsin Madison, studied Wisconsin parents’ preschool choices and found that many declined to enroll in the program because of the schedule.

“The half-day format is a nightmare for at least a third of all the parents we surveyed,” she said. “It’s curious to me in today’s day and age that people imagine that a half day would work.“

When universal preschool originally launched in Florida, the vision was to offer both a 3-hour and a 6hour preschool day, but there was never enough funding for the longer day, said Madeleine Thakur, president of the advocacy group, The Children’s Movement of Florida. Some schools — those that receive federal funds for lowincome students — cover the extra cost of full-day preschool for some students, but the coveted spots are in short supply.

In Vermont, momentum had been growing to increase the number of statefunde­d preschool hours beyond the current 10 a week, but the pandemic derailed that discussion, said Carlson. “There is a lot of agreement, particular­ly among working families and schools, that more time would be better,” she said.

Teacher qualificat­ions

The four states profiled have various requiremen­ts for universal preschool teachers — Oklahoma and Wisconsin require them to have bachelor’s degrees, while Florida does not. Vermont is something of a hybrid — requiring bachelor’s degrees for universal preschool teachers in public school settings, but not for all teachers in private settings. These difference­s reflect both ongoing national debate about whether teachers with four-year college degrees provide better preschool experience­s than those without, and the reality that such requiremen­ts pose a major financial barrier in light of the field’s low pay.

Colorado’s existing preschool program doesn’t require bachelor’s degrees and meets only four of the institute’s 10 benchmarks.

Carlson, who estimated that 60% of Vermont’s universal preschoole­rs are served in private settings, said the more lenient degree requiremen­ts for those classrooms was one of the concession­s made when the program began. The state has put money toward helping preschool teachers further their education, but more needs to be done, she said.

Carlson’s advice to Colorado: “Be willing to compromise with a plan [that says] this is where we’re starting and we’re going to keep working to get to … where the vision was.”

Thakur, of Florida, said many wonderful preschool teachers don’t have bachelor’s degrees currently so it shouldn’t be a requiremen­t at the inception of a universal program. Plus, with teachers in private preschool settings often paid much less than public school counterpar­ts, it’s not fair to require the degrees, she said.

Who’s got access?

The idea behind universal preschool is to serve every child whose parents want a spot, but that can be hard to deliver on a consistent statewide basis.

Carlson said offering preschool in public and private settings helps ensure access in Vermont, partly because private centers can often provide wraparound care that meshes with parents’ work schedules and locations. At the same time, some preschoole­rs with disabiliti­es lose out on special education services if they attend preschool with private providers outside of their school districts, she said.

Joe Dorman, CEO at the Oklahoma Institute for Child Advocacy, said reaching rural children has been a struggle in his state. In some cases, it’s because of preschool staff shortages or a dearth of seats, but there are also some families who don’t see the value of preschool, he said.

Dorman said Colorado should educate parents about the free preschool program before children turn 4. “Begin the promotiona­l process early,” he said. “Ensure that families recognize this.”

Preschool and K-12: separate or together?

In some universal preschool states, school districts are in charge of overseeing the program locally and offer many preschool seats in public school classrooms. These factors make school districts a key player in the universal preschool discussion, but also raise questions about how close the associatio­n should be.

Experts from other states said it’s important that universal preschool be designed around the developmen­tal needs of young children.

Thakur said Colorado leaders should be careful “not to bring the rigor of the K-12 system down into preschool.”

“You’ve really got to focus on relationsh­ips, making sure children learn how to communicat­e, cooperate, listen, and follow routines,” she said. “Those are the kinds of things that are a real down payment for the kindergart­en teacher.”

Graue agreed that preschool should be developmen­tally appropriat­e, not narrowly focused on math and literacy.

 ?? Eve Edelheit, © The New York Times Co. ?? Ritchie Jones, a teacher’s assistant, with students at the Don Brewer Head Start center in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., Nov. 19, 2018.
Eve Edelheit, © The New York Times Co. Ritchie Jones, a teacher’s assistant, with students at the Don Brewer Head Start center in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., Nov. 19, 2018.

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