Preschool failures: missing benefits.

AuthorSnell, Lisa
PositionCitings - Brief article

THIS YEAR governors have continued to expand state-run preschool programs. Bobby Jindal, a Republican, signed a program to fund preschool for every 4-year-old in Louisiana by 2013. Deval Patrick, a Democrat, signed Massachusetts' universal preschool program into law; another Democrat, Jennifer Granholm, boosted funding for Michigan's pre-K program by $10 million. Across the United States, current state spending on state-run preschool programs is close to $4 billion a year.

Tennessee's program is considered the gold standard. It meets nine out of 10 criteria for a high-quality program set by the National Institute for Early Education Research, including instructors with teaching credentials, small class size, and comprehensive early learning standards. Yet an interim study for the state Comptroller's Office, conducted by the Ohio-based Strategic Research Group, finds that the advantages of participating in the program disappear by the time students reach second grade. In every case, in every subject, there was no statistical difference...

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