The Standard Journal

Georgia House eyes more pre-K support

- By Dave Williams

An ad hoc committee of Georgia House lawmakers is recommendi­ng smaller class sizes, higher teacher pay, and more money for operating and capital costs to beef up the state's prekinderg­arten program.

With few changes in state support to the lottery-funded program since its inception 30 years ago, pre-kindergart­en enrollment in Georgia has fallen from a high of 82,868 students in 2012 to 73,462.

A report released by the House Working Group on Early Childhood Education last week blames the decline on an inability to find teachers willing to work at state-funded salaries and inadequate state funding for opening and operating classrooms.

“We know when our children start fast in school, educationa­l outcomes are improved dramatical­ly,” said House Speaker Jon Burns, R-Newington, who formed the ad hoc committee last spring. “One of the best predictors of educationa­l success is having a strong prekinderg­arten program.”

“This is very much a workforce developmen­t issue,” added Speaker Pro Tempore Jan Jones, R-Milton, who chaired the committee. “The more children have access to pre-K, the more parents can reenter the workforce.”

The committee is recommendi­ng reducing the average pre-kindergart­en class size from 22 — a move the state made during the budget crunch the Great Recession brought on more than decade ago — to 20.

The report also proposed raising the salaries of assistant teachers in the pre-K program from $20,190 per year to $25,700, which would align their pay with K-12 paraprofes­sionals, and increasing pay for lead pre-K teachers to the state's salary schedule for K-12 public school teachers.

“There's no substitute for equalizing salaries, to recognize the great important work these folks are doing,” Burns said.

The committee also is recommendi­ng updating the pre-K formula for operations from the current $8,000 per pre-K classroom per year, which has not been changed since 2004, to $30,000. Both public schools and private pre-K providers for the first time would get state funding for constructi­on of pre-K classrooms.

The various recommenda­tions in the report would cost just more than $100 million per year, funds that would come from the Georgia Lottery Corp.'s healthy budget reserves.

Jones said the goal is to put the state in a position to offer pre-K to every parent in Georgia who wants to enroll their 4-year-olds in either a public or private pre-K program.

The percentage of children enrolled in pre-K varies widely across the state. Some counties have waiting lists as high as 339, with 2,714 youngsters statewide on a waiting list. Statewide, only 53% of eligible children are enrolled in pre-K.

“I'm hopeful we will see a more robust offering of public pre-K,” Jones said. “I'm confident we can change what has been happening over the last few years.”

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 ?? House Media Services ?? House Speaker Pro Tem Jan Jones, R-Milton, chair of an ad hoc committee on early childhood education, calls for more support for pre-K Tuesday at the Georgia Capitol.
House Media Services House Speaker Pro Tem Jan Jones, R-Milton, chair of an ad hoc committee on early childhood education, calls for more support for pre-K Tuesday at the Georgia Capitol.
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