Early Childhood

L.A. Preschool Effort Preparing For 2004 Launch

By Linda Jacobson — May 14, 2003 5 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

Members of the Los Angeles County Children and Families Commission expect to have a blueprint by fall for implementing a new preschool initiative. And by spring or summer of 2004, it’s possible that pilot programs will begin serving children.

“I would like to see an early launch begin in the first or second quarter of next year,” Karen Hill-Scott, a Los Angeles-based child-development expert and the chief consultant to the commission’s Universal Access to Preschool Initiative, said to reporters during a recent conference call. “But the worst thing that could happen to us is to trip all over our own feet as we rush to do something tangible. We want it to be meaningful.”

Last summer, the commission—which administers the county’s share of tobacco-tax revenues dedicated to such services under a state ballot measure—committed $100 million toward expanding early-childhood education for all 3- to 5-year-olds in the county and working to craft a 10-year plan for serving all children from birth through age 5. (“L.A. Preschool Plan Draws Attention,” Sept. 4, 2002.)

Since then, an advisory panel of roughly 100 people has been meeting once a month to develop the new preschool system’s various parts, covering such aspects as program standards, research, and financing, Ms. Hill-Scott said.

“We are moving at a speed that other states tell us is quite accelerated,” said Teresa Nuno, the Los Angeles commission’s director of programs and planning. She added that next year’s launch would include activities intended to build public awareness about the new services. And she said that the initial spending would most likely go toward expanding existing high-quality preschool programs to serve more children.

Need for Identity

Officials estimate that roughly 100,000 Los Angeles children in the relevant age span are not participating in preschool now, and that many more are in programs of poor quality. When the program is implemented, it’s likely that the county will be serving more preschoolers than most states do through their publicly financed pre-K programs.

The challenge for the commission is to decide how the system will be managed over time and how to give it a “clear identity” that doesn’t make it seem like just another source of money, said Bruce Fuller, an education professor at the University of California, Berkeley.

He mentioned, as an example, Georgia’s Office for School Readiness, which controls funding for a variety of early-childhood programs, including that state’s lottery-financed pre-K program, and sets standards for providers that want to participate.

“The commission has this huge task of getting a lot of players under this same umbrella,” Mr. Fuller said.

As the Los Angeles County panel moves forward, efforts to significantly expand preschool programs are also building at the state level.

Last month, the education committee of the California Assembly, the legislature’s lower house, passed a measure that would set up a statewide system of school-readiness centers. The bill would also establish universal access to health and developmental screenings for young children, beginning in communities with low-performing schools and expanding across the state by 2014.

Sponsors of the bill are in no hurry to get it passed this year, however. Their intent is for it to move slowly through the two-year legislative process so that support for the concept of a statewide preschool system can build.

“While we know the costs and challenges are daunting, we know from the research that this is the right thing to do,” Jane I. Henderson, the executive director of the California Children and Families Commission, said during the April 23 press briefing at which Ms. Hill-Scott spoke.

Private Support

Support for the movement is also coming from the private sector. Late last year, the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, based in Palo Alto, Calif., announced it would commit more than $7 million of its $18 million “children, families, and communities” budget to building public awareness of universal preschool and awarding grants for the construction of early-education facilities.

Foundation president Richard T. Schlosberg III, who also took part in the press conference, said that the present might appear to be an unlikely time to call for increased spending on programs for young children. He noted that the state is facing a $35 billion deficit through the rest of this fiscal year and the next fiscal year, on an annual budget of about $80 million, and that “child care is on the chopping block.”

“But we believe that it’s important to lay the groundwork now, for when the economy is likely to be better,” he said.

Of all 50 states, California ranks fifth from the bottom in the percentage of children enrolled in either public or private preschool, according to the National Institute for Early Education Research, based at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J. About half the state’s 1 million 3- and 4-year-olds attend preschool programs, compared with a national average of 64 percent.

Yet advocates for early education point to a growing body of research indicating a high-quality preschool experience not only prepares a youngster for school, but also brings society a return on its investment, several times over.

At last month’s biennial conference of the Society for Research in Child Development, researchers representing three independent and long-running studies on early-childhood programs gathered to present cost-benefit data demonstrating that money spent on preschool can lead to a wide range of positive outcomes.

For example, compared with people who hadn’t attended preschool, participants in the programs were found to be less likely in later life to require special education services, go on welfare, or be arrested for a violent crime. Preschool alumni, the researchers found, also earn more money over their lifetimes than their peers who didn’t attend.

The programs studied were the High/Scope Perry Preschool in Ypsilanti, Mich., the Carolina Abecedarian preschool program in Chapel Hill, N.C., and the Chicago Child-Parent Centers.

Aid From Initiative

In addition to the Los Angeles County effort, other local commissions across California are identifying preschool as a top priority for funds under Proposition 10, a ballot initiative passed by California citizens in 1998. The measure, spearheaded by the actor-director Rob Reiner, uses a 50-cent-a-pack tax on cigarettes to help pay for health, education, and other services for children from birth through age 5.

In San Mateo County, just south of San Francisco, for example, the children and families commission plans to allocate $1 million each year for the next 10 years toward expanding access to preschool—first for 4-year-olds and then for 3-year-olds.

Lois Salisbury, the director of the children, families, and communities program at the Packard Foundation, sees more local commissions taking a similar tack.

“I’m quite sure,” she said, “there will be some other major counties coming on line soon.”

Related Tags:

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
School & District Management Webinar
Stop the Drop: Turn Communication Into an Enrollment Booster
Turn everyday communication with families into powerful PR that builds trust, boosts reputation, and drives enrollment.
Content provided by TalkingPoints
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Special Education Webinar
Integrating and Interpreting MTSS Data: How Districts Are Designing Systems That Identify Student Needs
Discover practical ways to organize MTSS data that enable timely, confident MTSS decisions, ensuring every student is seen and supported.
Content provided by Panorama Education
Artificial Intelligence Live Online Discussion A Seat at the Table: AI Could Be Your Thought Partner
How can educators prepare young people for an AI-powered workplace? Join our discussion on using AI as a cognitive companion.

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Early Childhood Head Start Confronts More Funding Disruptions and Policy Whiplash
Program operators have struggled to draw down routine funding, and puzzled over how to comply with confusing policy directives.
11 min read
River Yang, 3, looks out the window of a school bus as it prepares to depart the Meadow Lakes CCS Early Learning, a Head Start center, on May 6, 2024, in Wasilla, Alaska.
River Yang, 3, looks out the window of a school bus on May 6, 2024, as it prepares to depart the Meadow Lakes CCS Early Learning, a Head Start center in Wasilla, Alaska. Head Start providers nationwide are contending with intermittent funding delays and policy changes that have upended the program for much of its 60th anniversary year.
Lindsey Wasson/AP
Early Childhood Download 7 Ways to Help Kindergartners Regulate Their Emotions (DOWNLOADABLE)
Teachers report a surge in kindergartners struggling to regulate their emotions. This tip sheet has steps on how to respond.
1 min read
Kindergarten students practice greeting each other in a dual-language immersion class.
Kindergarten students practice greeting each other in a dual-language immersion class. Teachers report that more kindergartners are coming to class unable to effectively manage their emotions.
Allison Shelley for All4Ed
Early Childhood Q&A How a State's Transitional Kindergarten Expansion Has Gone So Far
California is gearing up to help more 4-year-olds get ready for kindergarten.
6 min read
Transitional kindergarten teacher Amy Weisberg helps a young student at Topanga Charter Elementary School in the Topanga district of Los Angeles on Sept. 11, 2012. A California law requires public schools to add a grade level this fall designed to give the very youngest students a boost when they enroll in kindergarten, but charter schools say the law does not apply to them, pitting them against the state Department of Education.
Transitional kindergarten teacher Amy Weisberg helps a young student at Topanga Charter Elementary School in the Topanga district of Los Angeles on Sept. 11, 2012. California will require public schools that offer kindergarten to add free, inclusive prekindergarten this school year.
Nick Ut/AP
Early Childhood ‘Crying, Yelling, Shutting Down’: There’s a Surge in Kindergarten Tantrums. Why?
Educators are reporting a surge in the number of kindergartners coming to school unable to regulate their emotions. What's going on?
6 min read
A kindergartener in a play-based learning class prepares for outdoor forest play time at Symonds Elementary School in Keene, N.H. on Nov. 7, 2024.
A kindergartner in a play-based learning class prepares for outdoor forest play time at Symonds Elementary School in Keene, N.H., on Nov. 7, 2024. Across the country, kindergartners are struggling with self-regulation.
Sophie Park for Education Week