Universal Preschool News
In this section, you'll find editorials, legislation, public policy and trends
on issues relating to preschool, pre-kindergarten, childcare and the push toward
universal preschool education. Particularly of note are articles concerning the
states claim of a compelling interest in compulsory preschool education. Visit
often for the latest preschool news.
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Universal preschool: Good idea, hard to do
Local school officials support President Barack Obama's proposal for universal preschool, but say they have no money or space to make it happen.
In his State of the Union address Feb. 12, Obama called for quality preschool education for every child in the nation. Increasing preschool attendance would reduce teen pregnancy and violent crime and increase the rate of high school graduation, while bridging the gap between disadvantaged and middle-class children, the president said.
by Rebecca Layne
March 13, 2013
[More Results from winchesterstar.com]
Is Universal Preschool Beneficial? An Assessment of RAND Corporation's Analysis and Proposals for California
Almost two-thirds of California families currently choose to send their 4-year-olds to preschool.Of those who do, almost half choose a preschool program operated by the state of California, while the other half choose a privately operated preschool.
If Proposition 82, an initiative on the
June ballot, is implemented those figures will radically change. Most family- and other privately owned
preschools will vanish, replaced by government-run, taxpayer-funded preschools. This report assesses RAND Corporation's cost benefit analysis and finds that it significantly
overestimates the upsides and drastically underestimates the downsides of universal preschool and
the California proposal. Using RAND's own data and alternative assumptions based on the studies they reference, it is easy to demonstrate that universal preschool generates losses of 25 to 30 cents for every dollar spent.
by Christopher F. Cardiff and Edward Stringham
May 30, 2006
[More Results from Reason Foundation [pdf]]
Don't judge a preschool by whether it has computers
Unless you count the plastic one next to the two real-but-not-connected telephones in the dress-up corner of the yellow room, there's no computer in the classrooms at Watertown Cooperative Nursery School.
In the search for the perfect preschool, that could make or break some parents' decision. Teaching director Margaret Cleremont makes no apologies. "If what they are looking for is reading skills and worksheets and an emphasis on academics rather than on social and emotional development, we're not for them," she says.
by Barbara F. Meltz
September 29, 2005
[More Results from The Boston Globe]
Dawn to dusk care plan for schools
All children under 14 in England will be offered "dawn to dusk" care under a radical extension of the current school day, which the government hopes will become known in the education lexicon as "Kelly hours".
But today's announcement by the education secretary, Ruth Kelly, is likely to be overshadowed by questions from teachers' leaders about how the so-called extended schools - open from 8am to 6pm - will be funded, and warnings of the bureaucracy involved.
by Rebecca Smithers
June 13, 2005
[More Results from Guardian Unlimited (UK)]
County readies for free preschool
Universal preschool â€" or free and voluntary preschool for all â€" is creating a huge buzz in California, with the prospect looming of a June 2006 ballot initiative led by Rob Reiner to fund such as proposal.
First 5 Commission leads effort to create countywide program. Contra Costa County had been mulling the idea for free preschool for more than a year now. But on Thursday, about 75 representatives of early childhood education, private preschools, K-12 school districts, the parent community and nonprofit organizations met to begin the planning process.
by Rebecca F. Johnson,
June 3, 2005
[More Results from Inside Bay Area - Tri-Valley Herald (CA)]
Opinion: Preschool is No Answer
Those who call for more state funding for preschool age children are ignoring one important fact: American preschoolers are doing better than ever.
Throughout the 20th century, the scores of preschool age children on IQ and kindergarten readiness tests have climbed steadily upward.
In short, American children start school better prepared than ever. It's not until they move up through grade school and on to high school that their performance declines.
by David F. Salisbury
January 10, 2002
[More Results from CATO Institute]
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