This timely book will help policymakers and practitioners convert their visions of high-quality early education into on-the-ground reality by providing a much-needed, richly detailed look at how states can design, fund, and manage exemplary programs. The authors describe and analyze how four states―Michigan, West Virginia, Washington, and North Carolina―have built early education systems that positively affect student outcomes. Sharing a commitment to advancing key elements of a quality preschool education, each of the states developed programs with different enrollment requirements, services, and oversight. All of them, however, rely on common overarching strategies, such as: establishing standards and supporting improvement, investing in knowledgeable educators, coordinating and aligning early education programs with elementary school, seeking sufficient funding sources and mechanisms, and building broad-based support. This book offers powerful lessons for anyone who is committed to delivering engaging, age-appropriate preschool programs for all.
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"Making sure that young children get a good education during their earliest years has been my priority for 4 decades and was at the top of my to-do list when I was the governor of North Carolina. I have kept at it ever since, enlisting current and future governors and other state leaders in the cause. That's why this book is so valuable—it's a "how-to" for the current generation of political leaders, Republicans and Democrats alike, who want to develop early education policies and practices that work."
—
James B. Hunt Jr.,
Governor of North Carolina, 1977-85, 1993-2001
"On the Road to High-Quality Early Learning
provides critical insights for addressing the key challenge for preschool policy:fulfilling preschool's promise at scale."
—
W. Steven Barnett
, Board of Governors Professor and director of the National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER) at Rutgers University
"The research has long been clear that when early childhood professionals have high-quality interactions with young children, those children enjoy immediate and long-term benefits. What’s much less clear is how states can go about maximizing the number of those high-quality interactions. This book is a great resource for everybody engaged in state-level processes on behalf of young children, providing valuable lessons from leading states to help other states chart their own path."
—
Elliot Regenstein
, Partner, Foresight Law + Policy
Marjorie E. Wechsler is principal research manager at the Learning Policy Institute (founded by Linda Darling-Hammond) and co-leads the organization’s Early Childhood Learning team. David L. Kirp is a professor of the Graduate School at the University of California, Berkeley, a senior scholar at the Learning Policy Institute, and a contributing writer at The New York Times. Titilayo Tinubu Ali, Madelyn Gardner, Anna Maier, Hanna Melnick, and Patrick M. Shields are all with the Learning Policy Institute.
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