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PK-3: What Is It and How Do We Know It Works?

As evidence mounts, more and more American political and education leaders are concluding it’s wise to invest in Prekindergarten (PK) education. Economic analyses show prevention of poor educational performance costs less than its remediation. And the promise PK shows for boosting student achievement appeals to leaders under increasing pressure from state and federal education accountability measures required by No Child Left Behind. Without early education programs, children growing up in low-income households lose ground to their middle-class peers, a gap that only widens as they advance through elementary school.

Most leaders, however, continue to view early childhood education narrowly as an initiative to prepare children for Kindergarten. This brief argues that policy makers can reap a better return on their PK investments if they adopt a more expansive view of this first stage of education as a period extending from PK through third grade.

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Source

FCD

Author(s)Bill Graves
Date5/01/06
Organization(s):FCD
Pages8
SubmitterAriana Sani

Filed under:

Benefit-Cost Analysis, Child Development