In the past month, two organizations not typically associated with early education – the College Board and The Society for Human Resource Management – have come out with reports acknowledging the benefits of quality early childhood education and calling for more public investment in programs that serve young children.
The College Board recommends that “states provide a program of voluntary high-quality, preschool education, universally available to 3- and 4-year-old children from families at or below 200 percent of the poverty line” as a means of improving college graduation rates. (Read more in today’s piece in
USA Today.)
The report,
The College Completion Agenda, points to the fact that research suggests early childhood education programs improve school readiness levels for children from low-income families, and that children from low-income are less likely to have access to high-quality preschool programs than higher-income families.
Early Ed Watch is glad to see organizations that focus on higher education and workforce issues recognize the importance of all children getting the right educational start.