1 / 19

The State of Pre-K: Realities and Opportunities in Texas

The State of Pre-K: Realities and Opportunities in Texas. Mandi Kimball, Director of Public Policy and Government Affairs. Project overview. Background. $ 5.4 billion cut to education funding in 2011 Discretionary grant funds for pre-k lost $200 million.

Download Presentation

The State of Pre-K: Realities and Opportunities in Texas

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The State of Pre-K: Realities and Opportunities in Texas Mandi Kimball, Director of Public Policy and Government Affairs

  2. Project overview

  3. Background • $5.4 billion cut to education funding in 2011 • Discretionary grant funds for pre-k lost $200 million. • In response, C@R conducted a study on the impact of the school budget cuts

  4. School Budget Study • C@R sent survey to every district in Texas and conducted qualitative interviews in select districts • Over 400 school districts participated, representing 65% of the student population in the state • Many survey respondents reported a decrease in pre-kindergarten program offerings

  5. Current Study • With the support of the Meadows Foundation and TEGAC, C@R has begun The State of Pre-K: Realities and Opportunities in Texas • A mixed-methods study to assess the current state of public Texas pre-kindergarten programs and make recommendations for increasing pre-kindergarten programs statewide

  6. Objective #1 • Address the lack of data surrounding Texas Pre-K programs • What do we know about Texas Pre-K programs? • Which districts offer at least a half-day program • How many students in each district are enrolled in Pre-K • What isn’t tracked? • How many and which districts offer a full-day program • Which student populations are served by these programs • Data on class sizes and student teacher ratios

  7. Objective #2 • Provide a better picture of the state of pre-kindergarten programs in Texas • Access • Funding • Class sizes and teacher ratios

  8. Objective #3 • Provide practical policy recommendations for increasing access to pre-kindergarten across the state

  9. Survey Research • Survey has been sent to every district in the state, addressing: • Half-day vs. full-day programs • Populations served • Funding models • Class sizes and ratios • Challenges faced

  10. Qualitative Research • Select sample of 5-10 districts to further evaluate • Districts that are offering Pre-k above and beyond mandates using innovative funding models that could be replicated • Qualitative research and interviews with district representatives on policies, strategies, funding sources, partnerships, etc. in these districts • Outline case studies for these model districts

  11. Additional Policy Research • Research state-level Pre-k policy in Texas and other states • Policies in other states that promote Pre-k • In-depth summary of current Texas policies and statutes

  12. Final Report • Using the information collected in each phase of this study, C@R will produce a report to disseminate to districts and policy makers • Outline the current state of pre-kindergarten in Texas • Serve as a toolkit for Texas districts to increase access to pre-kindergarten • Provide policy recommendations for Texas legislators to promote pre-kindergarten access during the 84th Legislative Session

  13. Project update

  14. Survey Update • Approximately 44% of 1,108 school districts have responded to date • Over 55% of the total student population in the state is represented by the responses • Follow up will continue for the next two weeks to increase response rate • Our partners at TEA and the Texas Legislature will be sending out emails to their district contacts

  15. Preliminary Results • Roughly 50% of districts report providing a full-day pre-k program • 38% provide half-day • 4% provide both • 4% don’t provide pre-k

  16. Preliminary Results • 55% of districts have a policy to cap pre-k class sizes • 29% of districts report wanting to expand half-day to full-day with additional funding from the legislature

  17. Policy Update • In contact with the Legislative Budget Board, Texas Education Agency, and other key stakeholders • Conducted in-depth research of Texas policies and statutes • Transitioning to the nationwide policy scan • Oklahoma, Florida, Georgia, West Virginia

  18. Next Steps • Closing the survey and analyzing final set of responses • Selecting districts for case studies and conducting qualitative interviews • Capitol events: May and September

  19. Questions? Mandi Kimball Director of Public Policy and Government Affairs mkimball@childrenatrisk.org

More Related