Posted on 02/15/2006 4:24:48 PM PST by SmithL
SACRAMENTO, CA A Public Policy Institute of California poll in January showed that 63 percent of likely voters support Rob Reiners government-run universal preschool initiative. While Reiners camp is predictably puffing this supposedly clear-cut support, the reality is much more cloudy.
First, many initiatives in California have started with similar levels of support only to lose on Election Day. What sounds like a good idea in a poll question often seems much less so after opponents have time to air their criticisms. In the case of the Reiner initiative, the critics are powerful and not limited to anti-government conservatives. For instance, one of Reiners toughest opponents has been the Los Angeles Times.
Last year, a Times editorial sharply criticized the proposals tax-the-rich funding mechanism and the earmarking of newly raised tax dollars specifically for government-run preschool. "Lets repeat," the Times emphasized, "the voting booth isnt the place to draw up the state budget." In the wake of this editorial, the Times attack on the Reiner initiative has continued unabated.
Earlier this month, Michael Hiltzik, the papers usually liberal business columnist, described the initiative as "another attempt at ballot-box budgeting featuring misleading PR and misguided pied-piper appeal." Hiltzik then ripped the RAND Corporation study, which has become the bible of Reiners campaign. The study claims that for every $1 spent on preschool, society will get back $2.62 in long-term benefits such as better student performance and lower crime.
Hiltzik notes that RANDs calculations are based on a Chicago program aimed at black children in that citys poorest neighborhoods. Although the studys main author says that the Chicago program is the most relevant for comparison purposes with Reiners envisioned California program, Hiltzik notes that "the two programs are hardly identical." The Chicago program provides health screening, speech therapy services, meals, home visits and continual and intensive parental involvement efforts. "None of these elements," observes Hiltzik, "is specifically funded by the Reiner initiative."
Further, whereas the estimates of the benefits of the Chicago program are based on tracking students for decades, the estimates of the benefits of a California program are, in Hiltziks words, "an extrapolation applied to a program that doesnt yet exist." Thus, RANDs benefit claims "should be seen as a projection, not a measurement."
The Los Angles Times isnt the only unlikely home of Reiner skeptics. Academics at the University of California have issued studies that undercut key arguments of the Reiner campaign.
In January, UC Santa Barbara researchers found that because student achievement gains attributed to preschool attendance largely evaporate after four years in elementary school, "preschool alone may have limited use as a long-term strategy for improving the achievement gap without strengthening the schools these students attend or without additional support during the school years." In other words, unless Californias under-performing public K-12 system improves, dont expect preschool to produce all those long-term benefits that Reiner claims.
Reiners campaign tries to dismiss such evidence by arguing that unlike many current preschool programs, their initiative will guarantee "high-quality" preschool. Key to their definition of "high-quality" is the initiatives requirement that all preschool teachers have a bachelors degree and a post-bachelors teaching credential in early childhood education. Other UC researchers have also questioned this argument.
Well-known UC Berkeley professor Bruce Fuller and two fellow researchers issued a study last year that found that many of the studies claiming to show a connection between preschool teachers holding bachelors degrees and better student performance were methodologically flawed. They concluded: "Claims that a bachelors degree further advances child development simply cannot be substantiated by studies conducted to date."
Finally, even Georgetown University professor William Gormley, whose research on Oklahomas universal preschool program is often cited by the Reiner campaign, admits that, "A universal pre-K program may or may not be the best path to school readiness." Gormleys own studies find inconsistent evidence as to whether universal preschool helps improve the short-term performance of middle- and upper-income children. And, indeed, theres no long-term evidence that preschool helps non-disadvantaged children a fact that undercuts the entire basis for a universal program.
Exposing the initiatives inherent problems will make many voters re-think their initial support of the Reiner scheme. A determined, informed, substantive and adequately funded campaign against the initiative stands a good chance of succeeding.
Lance T. Izumi is Director of Education Studies at the Pacific Research Institute. He can be reached via email at lizumi@pacificresearch.org.
I wasn't sure who "Reiner" referred to and then I realized that this was a California story: Meathead!
I know this is a waste-of-space post, but....... I can't help but tell you, I'M LAUGHING SO HARD, there's real tears!!
Thanks, I need that!
BTTT
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