NYT Thursday April 23rd.
For the last dozen years, waves of
idealistic Americans have campaigned to reform and improve K-12 education.
Armies of college graduates joined
Teach for America. Zillionaires invested in charter schools. Liberals and
conservatives, holding their noses and agreeing on nothing else, cooperated to
proclaim education the civil rights issue of our time.
Yet I wonder if the education reform
movement hasn’t peaked.
The zillionaires are bruised. The
idealists are dispirited. The number of young people applying for Teach for America, after 15 years of growth, has dropped for
the last two years. The Common Core curriculum is now an orphan, with politicians vigorously
denying paternity.
K-12 education is an exhausted,
bloodsoaked battlefield. It’s Agincourt,
the day after. So a suggestion: Refocus some reformist passions on early
childhood.
I say that for three reasons. First,
there is mounting evidence that early childhood is a crucial period when the
brain is most malleable, when interventions are most cost-effective for at-risk kids.
Researchers are finding that poverty
can harm the brains of
small children, perhaps because their brains are subjected to excessive
cortisol (a stress hormone) and exposed less to conversation and reading. One study just
published in Nature Neuroscience found that children in low-income families had
a brain surface area on average 6 percent smaller than
that of children in high-income families.
“Neuroscience tells us we’re missing a
critical, time-sensitive opportunity to help the most disadvantaged kids,”
notes Dr. Jack Shonkoff,
an early childhood expert at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.
Growing evidence suggests what does
work to break the poverty cycle: Start early in life, and coach parents to
stimulate their children. Randomized controlled trials, the gold standard of
evidence, have shown this with programs like Nurse-Family Partnership, Reach Out and Read, and high-quality
preschool. These kinds of interventions typically produce cognitive gains that
last a few years and then fade — but, more important, alsoproduce better life
outcomes, such as less crime, fewer teenage pregnancies, higher high
school graduation rates, and higher incomes.
The second reason to focus on early
interventions is that the low-hanging fruit has already been picked in the K-12
world. Charter schools like KIPP showed that
even in high-poverty environments, students can excel. In New York City, which
under Michael Bloomberg became a center for education reform, high school
graduation rates rose to
66 percent in 2013 from 47 percent in 2005.
I support education reform. Yet the
brawls have left everyone battered and bloodied, from reformers to teachers
unions. I’m not advising surrender. Education inequity is America’s original
sin. A majority of American children in public schools are eligible for free or reduced
price lunches, and they often get second-rate teachers in
second-rate schools — even as privileged kids get superb teachers. This
perpetuates class and racial inequity and arises in part from a failed system
of local school financing.
But fixing K-12 education will be a
long slog, so let’s redirect some energy to children aged 0 to 5 (including
prenatal interventions, such as discouraging alcohol and drug use among
pregnant women).
That leads to my third reason: Early
education is where we have the greatest chance of progress because it’s not
politically polarized. New York City liberals have embraced preschool, but so have Oklahoma
conservatives. Teacher unions will flinch at some of what I say, but
they have been great advocates for early education. Congress can’t agree on
much, but Republicans and Democrats just approved new funding for
home visitation for low-income toddlers.
My perspective is shaped by what I’ve
seen. Helping teenagers and adults is tough when they’ve dropped out of school,
had babies, joined gangs, compiled arrest records or self-medicated.
But in Oklahoma, I once met two little
girls, ages 3 and 4, whose great-grandmother had her first child at 13, whose
grandmother had her first at 15, whose mom had her first at 13 and now has four
children by three fathers. These two little girls will break that cycle, I’m
betting, because they (along with the relative caring for them) are getting
help from an outstanding early childhood program called Educare. Those two
little girls have a shot at opportunity.
Even within early education, there will
be battles. Some advocates emphasize the first three years of life, while
others focus on 4-year-olds. Some seek to target the most at-risk children,
while others emphasize universal programs.
But early childhood is not a toxic
space, the way K-12 education is now. So let’s redeploy some of our education
passions, on all sides, to an area where we just may be able to find common
ground: providing a foundation for young children aged 0 to 5.
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