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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Universal and Targeted Approaches to Preschool Education in the United States

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TLDR
In the United States, enrollments in preschool center-based programs have leveled off at about 75 percent of four-year-olds and 50 percent of three-year olds as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
In the United States, enrollments in preschool center-based programs have leveled off at about 75 percent of four-year-olds and 50 percent of three year olds. Nearly all government programs restrict eligibility to children in low-income families, and these families have substantially increased preschool participation rates as a result. However, in the last decade little progress was made toward increasing enrollments, despite increases in government spending, and less than half of children in poverty attend public programs even at age four. The average educational quality of private programs is quite low, and public programs are only modestly better. As a result, the educational effectiveness of preschool programs in the United States tends to be much weaker than that of the well-known programs research has shown be cost-effective. This paper considers whether publicly funded preschool education for all children would alleviate these problems. Universal public preschool education would reach many more children in poor and low-income families. For means-tested programs constantly changing incomes present a moving target, while the stigma associated with programs for the poor also limits participation. Program effectiveness would be at least as good in a universal program as in targeted program, and effectiveness might actually improve. One source of increased effectiveness is peer effects on learning. In addition, parents from higher-income families may be better advocates for quality, and political support for quality may be higher. Children from middle- and higher-income families also will benefit from high-quality publicly-subsidized preschool programs. A universal approach will cost more than current targeted programs, but moving from targeted to universal public preschool education is likely to produce benefits that far exceed the additional cost.

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University of London Institute of Education

TL;DR: It will be seen from the table oligophrenias are the most frequent cause of incapacity with 62.8 per cent for children and among the mentally disturbed Schizophrenia shows the highest figure, i.e., 48.7 per cent.
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Impacts of Early Childhood Education on Medium- and Long-Term Educational Outcomes.

TL;DR: Meta-analysis of 22 high-quality experimental and quasi-experimental studies conducted between 1960 and 2016 finds that participation in ECE leads to statistically significant reductions in special education placement and grade retention and increases in high school graduation rates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does higher peer socio-economic status predict children's language and executive function skills gains in prekindergarten?

TL;DR: The authors examined the role of having a higher percentage of peers from higher-SES families on gains in children's receptive vocabulary and executive function skills at the end of pre-kindergarten.
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School Readiness among Low-Income, Latino Children Attending Family Childcare versus Centre-Based Care.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared the school readiness of low-income Latino children who attended either family childcare (FCC) or centre-based childcare (CBC) with childcare subsidies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Meta-analysis of the effects of early education interventions on cognitive and social development

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of early childhood education programs on preschoolers and the magnitude of cognitive and affective gains was investigated. But, the authors did not consider the effect of the type of early education.

Early Child Care and Children's Development Prior to School Entry: Results from the NICHD Study of Early Child Care

Bonnie Knoke, +1 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of early child care on children's functioning at the age of 41 2 years were examined in the NICHD (National Institute of Child Health and Human Development) Study of Early Child Care, a prospective longitudinal study of more than 1,000 children.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparative benefit-cost analysis of the Abecedarian program and its policy implications

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a benefit-cost analysis of a preschool program that provided intensive education during full-day child care, showing that the benefits of such a program include increased maternal earnings, decreased K-12 schooling costs, increased lifetime earnings and decreased costs related to smoking.
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