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Business leaders have long held a serious stake in how our nation's education system performs. After all, public schools bear the responsibility for creating a workforce that is innovative and industrious enough to compete in the global marketplace. Whereas business-driven educational reform has largely focused on the K-12 years, recent studies, including one by the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), have now shown that the quality of care infants and toddlers receive can significantly impact their cognitive and social development through elementary schooland even beyond. These findings highlight the importance of providing learning opportunities for children in their preschool years. Still, surprisingly few federal policies address the need for early education.
Earlier this year, the Askwith Education Forum series hosted a discussion on the potential impact of universal prekindergarten education on child development and on our nation's competitive standing within the global workforce. Three education and policy leaders offered their perspectives. Roy Bostock is the chair of the Committee for Economic Development (CED), a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization of business leaders and educators that advocates for strong state and federal government partnerships to ensure high-quality early education for every child. (CED's efforts led to the development of the Marshall Plan in 1942.) Margaret Blood is the director of the Massachusetts chapter of Early Education for All Campaign (EEA), which is supported by business, education, religious, and labor leaders. (Last December, the organization submitted a bill to the Massachusetts state house, proposing universal early education.) HGSE professor Kathleen McCartney is one of the principal investigators in the NICHD study that tracked the effects of child care on more than 1,000 children from birth through sixth grade. An excerpt of their conversation follows. Roy Bostock: Early education is vital for children to develop to their full potential. Research shows that 85 percent of a person's intellect, personality, and social skills have developed by age five. Not only are children who attend pre-kindergarten 50 percent less likely to need special education services than children who have not, they also have lower rates of teen pregnancy, decreased delinquency, and higher rates of employment. One research project demonstrated that for every dollar invested in early childhood education, we received back seven dollars in lower costs of remediation and other kinds of compensatory costs. Society clearly pays for the lack of early education in many waysfrom lost economic productivity and tax revenues to higher crime rates and diminished participation in civic and cultural life. Having issued a call to action in the 1980s with a policy statement titled "Putting Learning First," and having called for standards and accountability in the late 1990s, the CED thought it was time to address the imperativeindeed, to throw down the gauntletfor early, quality childhood education in this country. The business community, the number one consumer of the education system, has a large role to play in universal pre-K; it's time it acknowledges the importance of educational investments in young children. Margaret Blood: Bostock: Early education should not be a privilege but a right. As it stands now, public spending on early care and education for children from birth to age five amounts to about $20 to $25 billion annually; parents put up the rest of the tab, about $55 billion. By contrast, K-12 gets about $400 billion annually, and at least $100 billion is spent on postsecondary education, including student aid. I'm a Republican, andthis surprises a lot of peopleI believe we need to advocate for tax increases if that's what we need to get these programs up and running universally. Kathleen McCartney: Blood: Bostock: McCartney: Blood: What we need to do in Massachusetts and what we need to do nationally is to find a way to create the tipping point on behalf of our youngest and most vulnerable children. Malcolm Gladwell, the author of The Tipping Point, who's actually trained as a health-care reporter, looked at the causes that turn maladies into epidemics. And there may be something in his theory that can be applied to the social sciences, to making good things happen. He has found that you can create a movement by engaging people and spreading a social good. We invite all of you to join us on behalf of early education for all young children. For More Information About the Article
HGSE News, Harvard Graduate School of Education
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