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The Case Against Government Preschool |
| Myths vs Facts |
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Karen R. Effrem, MD
EdWatch Director of Government Relations |
INTRODUCTION:
The pork-laden federal stimulus law contains $53.6 billion for
education including early childhood education and $2.1 billion for
Head Start and Early Head Start. Another $2 billion was added to the
Child Care and Development Block Grant, including $93.7 million for
childcare quality activities. Despite massive budget deficits, many
states like Minnesota are still trying to spend more on these wasteful,
ineffective, and invasive programs.
Although lacking evidence
of effectiveness and political popularity, early childhood education
has become the new silver bullet answer of the education cartel to
solve America's education woes. Unfortunately, liberals and teachers
unions with their desires for more funding and more control over
families have been joined by big business, with its insatiable appetite
for more workers, including mothers, and for government subsidies, in
this case to cover employees' childcare costs. These businesses, along
with allegedly conservative politicians and big government economists
have gotten on the bandwagon of having childcare turned into another
government education program funded by the taxpayers.
The
following is part one of excerpts from a presentation given by this
author at a "citizen jury" conducted at the University of Minnesota's
Humphrey Institute for Public Affairs in the spring of 2008. Citizens
were asked to decide about the benefits and necessity of expanding
these programs in the state of Minnesota. Proponents of expanded
government control over the minds and hearts of our youngest citizens
had nearly three full days to present their case. This author, as the
only opponent of this idea had 30 minutes. Despite the very lopsided
ratio of presentation time, the assembled citizens were deadlocked in
their decision - 1/3 supporting preschool, 1/3 opposing it, and 1/3
undecided.
This lack of enthusiasm for preschool is a microcosm
of what is true for much larger populations. In 2006, for example,
there was a statewide ballot initiative in California to tax the rich,
those making more than $400,000 per year individually or $800,000 per
couple, to fund universal preschool in that state. Despite it being in
liberal California, in what was essentially a Democratic primary and an
off-year election, after millions of dollars of campaigning by
proponents, the measure failed by twenty percentage points.
This
will be the first of several parts laying out the scientific, academic,
economic, and developmental problems with government expansion of early
childhood education and related programs. The entire presentation is available here.
We will first show the massive distortions of data used by economists,
researchers, and governments to mislead people into thinking there is a
crisis in preschool education:
MYTH: Brain Research Shows that Children Won't Develop Normally Without Education from Birth
"The brain development researchers will tell you that in the most stressful environments the damage to the brain is the most severe; waiting until the child turns three is too late." - Art Rolnick, see link here.
"Assertions that the die has been cast by the time the child enters school are not supported by neuroscience evidence and can create unwarranted pessimism about the potential efficacy of interventions that are initiated after the preschool years." - Jack Schonkoff and Deborah Phillips, ed., From Neurons to Neighborhoods: The Science of Early Childhood Development, National Academy Press, 2000, p. 216 (Note: This study is frequently quoted by proponents of ECE, but it is very interesting that this quote never seems to make it into the discussion)
"But there is already plenty of evidence that the biggest obstacle to learning is the belief that one cannot learn. By encouraging parents and teachers to accept this self-fulfilling prophecy, your story with its imagery of windows of opportunity slamming shut, may well do more to stunt children's futures than any deficiencies in their early upbringing. So far as we know, it is never too late for a child to get on the path to learning." - Dr. Seymour Pappert, Lego Professor of Learning Research at MIT, and Dr. Daniel Dennett, Director of the Tufts University Center for Cognitive Studies (Newsweek, 3/11/96, p.15)
"Minnesota has a readiness test right now and fifty percent of our kids do not pass that test. Most of those kids fall behind and never catch up. We've got pretty good data on that." - Art Rolnick, see link here.
"We know that three, four, and five years olds are very poor test takers... you know they have their own agendas, their own personalities, their own timelines, and they don't have the personal skills to sit for testing sometimes. And sometimes they lack language skills to truly explain what they know. They also haven't learned the social skills or the social rules for test taking. So, with any assessment of young children, we have to recognize the limitations of the data we have... So, with work sampling or with other kinds of observational assessments, you might wonder about the quality of the observation that the teacher did. And we might wonder about the conclusions that the teacher inferred from the observations. Are they accurate? Is that child really demonstrating a proficient or is it really in process? We wonder about those kinds of things with performance based assessments. With other testing, we might wonder if the testing day was a good day or a bad day for the child. We might wonder, 'Did he sleep well last night?' Did he have breakfast this morning? All those things might have an impact on how the child might behave if it is a good day." - Tracey Wallace, Kindergarten Readiness Assessment supervisor, House Early Childhood Learning Finance Committee, 2/2/07
"The Minnesota School Readiness Study found that between 90 percent and 97 percent of Minnesota five-year-olds were 'In Process' or 'Proficient' in five developmental areas necessary for success: physical development, the arts, personal and social development, language and literacy, and mathematical thinking." - Minnesota Department of Education press release 4/2/08
National Study:
- 94% are proficient at recognizing numbers, shapes, and counting to ten
- 92% are eager to learn
- 97% are in good health
- 82% basic pre-literacy skills such as knowing that print is read from left to right.
(America's Kindergartners - NCES 2000-070, February, 2000)
FACT: Readiness Assessments and Scores Can Have Negative Consequences.
"Because children develop and grow along a continuum with great variability, the goal of these studies is to assess children s proficiency within and across these developmental domains and not establish whether or not children are ready for school with the use of a composite ready or not ready score. Young children develop rapidly and at varying rates across the domains, and an early, definitive determination of readiness can have unintended negative consequences" - Minnesota Department of Education 2006 Readiness Study Report, pg 7.
Comments:
Why is it that when I was in school, it seems like we were actually learning? Yet, in the last 20 years it seems more money is pouring into these educational programs and less is being learned/taught.
I've had waaaay too much coffee this morning (allergic to caffine), so I hope this makes sense.
the fact is from birth to 3 is the most important time for a child, when the most brain connections will be made. i don't think preschool should be mandatory, but good ones MUST exist for those who need it. people will pay more to have someone clean their fucking house than care for their child. they will pay someone more to pick up their dog's shit than care for their child. ealry head start does AMAZING work. as for the kindergarten readiness bullshit, there is NO SUCH THING. kindergarten IS THE PREPARATION for school. the first 5 years are for play. children learn best through SELF DIRECTED PLAY AND LEARNING.
I am not being snarky, but I do have a question that sounds snark-ish, so please keep that in mind! LOL
Do you all agree with federally run/funded publis school yet disgaree with federally run/funded preschool? If so, why? To me, if you do that seems a little counterintuitive.
That said, I do not like federal schools and my dd actually attends PT preschool at an in home learning center right now, and when she reaches school age, we will send her to private school, that is run by a Judeo Christian Standard and which we like quite a bit. I do believe that the government should provide preschool to children for free like regular public school, but not make it mandatory except for at risk and mentally handicapped children. Maybe we should let our lawmakers know this, esppecially if anyone else agrees with me.
Thanks for taking the time to answer, and thanks for understanding that my question was not snarky, there is just no way to let my genuine curiosity, not hate, come across while typing. Y'all have a great day!
Hi mama4Christ! NO, NO, NO... I do not agree with federally run/funded government skools.. lol. I am a homeschooling mother of 4 sons and while home education isn't for everyone, I love it wholeheartedly. I HATE that while I spend quite a bit of our home budget on books my children will use during the course of our year, I still have to provide for gov. schools against my will. Unfortunately, public schools today are no where near the standard our Founders set.
"In Benjamin Franklin's 1749 plan of education for public schools in Pennsylvania, he insisted that schools teach "the excellency of the Christian religion above all others, ancient or modern."
In 1787 when Franklin helped found Benjamin Franklin University, it was dedicated as "a nursery of religion and learning, built on Christ, the Cornerstone.""
Obviously, the above plan for pubic institutions cannot be found but have been replaced with indoctrination into humanist ideology.
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It is interesting to understand that here in my area private school tuition is actually lower than what the state spends for public education. Yet, the private schools are turning out more college bound graduates.
The public school dropout rate is ridiculous which leads me to believe that public school administrators should be taking a page from the private book.
To put babies in school at such a early age what are they trying to have robots. They will hate schooling we pretend school at 3 and he loves it. He would not want to be away from me.
Way to Go for the home school moms you all are awesome. I have to teach my child more because she is in school and she was doing bad. The teacher said it was not her problem. I told the teacher every child learns different. they all do not learn the same. I wish her dad would agree for me to home school it would be so much easier. Thank you for the post.
Seems like the Government wants total control over everything. Could I be wrong?
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Hmmm....wonder what the readiness crisis is on "comprehensive sex education" from birth. *sigh*
- jenanddakidtoo
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