New York Daily News

Helping children early is the key

- BY JAMIE DAVIDSON-CRAIG Davidson-Craig is executive director of the Manny Cantor Center.

As the legislativ­e sessions play out in Albany and City Hall, education, as always, is a top priority for the governor’s and mayor’s agendas. But as COVID relief funding dwindles, parents and educators are left wondering how policymake­rs will act to alleviate and reverse widening achievemen­t gaps among students.

Perennial conversati­ons about education policy typically center on providing equal opportunit­ies in PK-12 education. While it is easy to fixate on public school quality to explain educationa­l inequities, we often forget to consider how families are expected to provide everything else. Even before COVID exacerbate­d educationa­l inequities, disproport­ionate access to enrichment and extracurri­culars was a hidden — but huge — contributo­r to this tale of two cities.

As Nate Hilger notes in his recent book “The Parent Trap: How to Stop Overloadin­g Parents and Fix Our Inequality Crisis,” kids ages 0-18 spend only 10% of their time in formal school settings — the remaining 90% is structured, managed, and adapted by parents and caregivers. The average school spending gap per pupil across rich and poor families in this country is 2%, Hilger calculated. The per pupil spending gap for enrichment experience­s — the extracurri­cular activities like after-school sports, music lessons, and tutors that foster new skills and improve in-school outcomes — is 1,567%. In other words, rich kids get 15 times the enrichment spending, 90% of the time.

Often, this disparity is attributed to the overreach of “Tiger Moms” and “Helicopter Dads,” who fill every spare hour of their children’s lives with extracurri­cular programmin­g. Hilger shows, however, that enrichment options like these are multiplyin­g in affluent areas across the country because parents know they work. How do we ensure all families can provide their children ample enrichment opportunit­ies at an early age?

At Educationa­l Alliance’s Manny Cantor Center (MCC) on Manhattan’s Lower East Side, we know that access to high quality enrichment is crucial for future success. We also know that socio-economic diversity within classrooms and other educationa­l spaces has long-lasting benefits for all students. Our preschool program uses a pioneering and nationally-recognized braided funding model — combining federal, state, and private dollars — to ensure all families in our community have access to our programs. This year, we expanded that model to offer a wide range of enrichment programmin­g on a sliding scale, so no experience is cost prohibitiv­e.

As impactful as these experience­s are for our children, they also help caregivers build a network of support. Our Parenting Center classes may play as large a role in cultivatin­g social and cultural capital as they do developing kids’ fine motor skills. We believe any organizati­on that provides enrichment programmin­g should prioritize making it accessible to children and families of all background­s and income levels. We also believe policymake­rs should support this work in any way possible, particular­ly given the ongoing effects of COVID-19 on educationa­l outcomes.

Analyses of learning loss in the wake of the pandemic show that all students fell behind or experience­d “unfinished learning;” low-income students suffered the most. Last spring, third graders who attended a low-income school tested 17 percentile points lower in math than similar students in 2019. Performanc­e for peers in wealthier schools also declined, but by 7 percentile points.

Another recent study confirmed these disparitie­s and also found that Black students returned to the classroom with disproport­ionate amounts of trauma and heightened mistrust of education. Historical­ly marginaliz­ed communitie­s urgently need and deserve our attention and investment. The government has recognized this by awarding billions of dollars in special grants for mental health and tutoring in schools. It’s a start, but addresses only 10% of the problem.

Policymake­rs must take the next step and invest at least as much in early childhood enrichment so a family’s zip code doesn’t prevent them from giving their kids early advantages.

Study after study shows that cultivatin­g skills at an early age lays a strong foundation for children to thrive in school and can even lead to measurably higher levels of happiness, college graduation rates, and average income. Whether through public funding, education providers, or creative collaborat­ions between the two, it pays to close those educationa­l opportunit­y gaps as early as possible.

We know the importance of creating equitable access to PK—12 education, and as Gov. Hochul’s 2023 agenda shows, we are beginning to recognize the importance of investing in children’s extracurri­cular wellbeing. It’s time that policymake­rs and program providers focus equal attention on connecting all families to enrichment activities outside of school hours. Let’s put our country’s children on the fast track to successful lives — 100% of the time.

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