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This article analyzes New York's Pre-K system, exploring goals, involvement of CBOs, curriculum, and broader infrastructure issues. It discusses state goals and the impact on child care centers.
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Raising All Boats: State Pre-K as a System-building Strategy Lessons from New York Dr. Mon Cochran Tufts University
Outline • Goals and Purposes of Pre-k Services • Pre-K in New York – An Overview • Involvement of CBOs: Opportunities and Challenges • Universal/Categorical Decision • Centralization: Of what? • Curriculum • Teacher Qualifications • Broader Infrastructure Issues • The Politics of PreK • PreK in the Next Decade – A few predictions • Q & A - discussion
Goals and Purposes of Pre-k Services • School Readiness • The expressed goal of most (all?) state pre-k programs • How is school readiness defined? Does it include emotional and social development in addition to language and cognition? • A Broader Perspective: Children, Families, Schools, and Communities • Continuity of care for children • The caring needs of employed parents • Employers and the labor market
KEY QUESTION With the introduction of prekindergarten, do we want to expand and improve the state’s overall early care and education system, or build another silo along side Head Start, non-profit child care, for-profit child care, and regulation-exempt care?
Pre-K in New York The Cornell Implementation Studies Document Analysis: District plans & final reports 1998-2000 (3 yrs) Survey of UPK Director’s: 94 Districts; 1999-2000 (2 years) CCR&R Study: Impact on infant & toddler programs: N=32 CCR&Rs 2001 Community- Based Centers Survey (N=284) 2004 Intensive Case Studies: 4 school districts 2002-03
Cornell Early Childhood Program Website http://www.human.cornell.edu/che/HD/CECP/index.cfm Pre[k] Now Website: www.preknow.org Citation: Holcomb, B. A Diverse System Delivers for Pre-K: Lessons Learned in New York State. Pre-K Now Research Series Book: The Promise of Pre-K Robt. Pianta& Carollee Howes (Eds.) 2009, Brookes My e-mail: mmc6@cornell.edu
New York UPK Program Scope 2002 2002 2001 2001 2000 2000 1999 1999 1998 1998
Policy Parameters – NY UPK • Administered by the State Department of Education, thru school districts • Local policy-making, within state parameters • Universal coverage over 3 to 4 years was goal; began in ‘high needs’ school districts (incl. all of NYC). • Certified teachers (Masters) and staff development • $2700-$4000 per child (2.5 hrs./day, 180 days/yr.), depending on % ‘high needs’ children • Community collaboration, with at least 10% of funds contracted out • Curriculum approach must be ‘developmentally appropriate” • Parent involvement and support services mandated
Percent of children in school- and Community-based Settings Upstate NYC
Impacts of UPK on Participating Child Care Centers in New York • Higher overall revenues • Reduced parent fees • Increased enrollments, espec. low income families, English language learners, special needs • Increased programming – literacy, math • Enhanced staff development/training • Teacher salary increases – in 40% of programs
Investment Indicators -CBOs • Remodeling classrooms • New equipment • New educational materials • Hiring more teachers • Hiring assistant teachers/aides • Hiring substitute teachers to facilitate teacher participation in professional development • Hiring staff developers or curriculum specialists • Increasing teacher salaries • Increasing salaries of assistant teachers/aides and support staff • More field trips
Other Advantages to Substantial use of Community-Based Settings • There is a better fit with the child care needs of employed parents – full-day care. • Schools needn’t find space in existing buildings. • Programs can be included that fit the cultural and ethnic backgrounds of families. • The family support and parent involvement alternatives are expanded. • Staff in Community-based Programs may have a better understanding of DAP than those in school settings
Challenges Linked to Involving Community-based Settings • Salary differential between teachers in school- and community-based settings. • Monitoring and insuring quality in community-based settings. • How to reach children in family-based care? • Infrastructure needed to write and manage contracts with community-based settings. • Need for policy innovations to allow equitable blending of UPK state funds with federal and other state funds.
Universal or Categorical? • Assumed trade-off between intensity for high-need children and political marketability. • Where is cut-off point? How regulate? Impacts on CBO involvement? • In New York, high need school districts receive higher per-child subsidies, and came first when funding was capped.
Locus of Control – How Centralized? • State agency needs to translate intent of legislation into core regulations. • State-level agency cannot anticipate or appreciate full range of possible community partners. • Local decision-making and design begets community ownership and shared values re program quality. • State-level monitoring essential; dissemination of promising practices very helpful.
One Curriculum – or Many? • No evidence that particular curriculum ‘brand’ makes difference in school readiness. • New York specified child-centered, developmentally appropriate parameters; wrote a curriculum guide; specified language and literacy. • School districts may specify curricular elements across sites, to provide consistency and focus professional development. • Recent research shows that adding curriculum “supplements” can improve reading readiness and impulse control
Percent of ClassroomsWith Certified Teachers Upstate NYC N=1499 N=454
Teacher Qualifications • Considerable variation exists from state to state. • New York has set a high bar: Masters plus certification. • Is there solid evidence that the Masters is worth the extra time/money in child outcomes? • New birth-grade 2 certification in New York has been a hard sell to colleges and students.
Broader Infrastructure Issues • Teacher preparation • Professional development • Promising practices exchange • Ongoing technical assistance • Site development/expansion • Blending funds • Transportation • Infants and toddlers • Evaluation
The Politics of Prekindergarten • The economic arguments • Long-term financial savings • Equity – reduce disparity in achievement • School reform/workforce preparation • ECE system-building • Time and timing
The Next Decade • Expansion to universal coverage • System-building – with addition of 3-year-olds • Professional development – cultural diversity • Head Start shift to 0-3? • Pressure from baby boom retirement