Governor Calls for 3/4 Cent Sales Tax for Education

Wednesday, January 18th, 2012 | Author: Tracy

Yesterday, Governor Bev Perdue called on the General Assembly to restore the three-quarters of the one-cent sales tax that was eliminated during the last legislative session and dedicate those funds to education.

In response, Dr. Olson Huff, Chair of the Board of The North Carolina Partnership for Children, Inc., released the following statement:

“North Carolina is known for investing in its people and recognizing that economic development begins with early childhood development. Our state’s early childhood work has produced enormous education, health, and economic results for the state. We see it in higher third grade reading and math scores, decreased special education placements, and lower dropout rates. We see it as a factor when businesses decide to move here and when magazines name our region as one of the best places to live.

With renewed investment, we can make children, families, communities and economies stronger. This is critical in today’s environment, where there are more children birth to five, more of those children are living in poverty, and far fewer resources are available than a decade ago. Since 1990, there has been an 85% increase in the number of children living in poverty. At the same time, funds have declined— most significantly during the last legislative session when early childhood education taking a disproportionate cut, meaning today far fewer children and communities are benefitting from needed early childhood services.

Any new public resources must be invested wisely. In the words of Dr. Andrew Meltzoff of University of Washington Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences, ‘There are only 2,000 days between the newborn baby and when that child will show up in kindergarten. . . Our children can’t wait.’

Together, we can provide the early education, health and developmental resources parents need to raise capable children and successful adults. In doing so, North Carolina will attract businesses, grow jobs and guarantee prosperity.”

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Three Reasons Why Early Education Matters to All of Us

Monday, December 19th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

Karen W. Ponder, Center

On December 10, 2011, Karen Ponder, past Smart Start President, delivered the commencement address at Averett University. She outlined three powerful reasons why early education matters and why it is important to all of us, regardless of vocation or where we are in our life span.

Good morning. President Franks, trustees, members of the faculty, staff, graduates and guests, I am honored to be with you today and to have the privilege to speak to you, especially the 2011 winter graduation class of Averett University, on this special occasion and important milestone in your life.

I suggest that you are here today because an adult(s) loved and cared for you, encouraged you, talked to you, and read to you….someone who gave you the feeling, whether subtle or explicit, that you are valuable and have what it takes to be successful. If I had the opportunity to interview each one of you, I’m sure you could name at least one adult who played such a role in your life and who has helped you get to this place.

My comments will focus on the importance and value of the earliest years of life and their relevance for all that follows. I will lay out a case for why early education matters to everyone here today, particularly to those graduating from this University, regardless of your career path or further educational pursuits….and I want to challenge you to make a difference in the life of a child…..whether your own or another child who needs your love and support to achieve great things.
Learning begins at birth. And brain building is a critical function during the first three to five years of life. Scientists tell us that 90% of a person’s brain connections are hard wired before they start to school. Therefore, the period of time between birth and kindergarten is the most important period of time in a person’s life for making brain connections—for creating the framework for a physically and emotionally

healthy individual with the maximum capacity to thrive, to learn, and to contribute to society. The first years are the time when the capacity to learn is created. And that foundation will then shape every learning experience that follows. This window of opportunity when the greatest impact can be made exists for a very short time. And the interactions and relationships that children have during this period are the determining factors, since early experiences, whether positive or negative, actually shape the architecture of the developing brain.

Dr. Jack Shonkoff, a Harvard brain researcher and developmental pediatrician, who, along with his colleagues, has conducted significant research on the developing brain and reviewed all the major brain studies, made the following statement:
“Scientific research reveals the critical impact of a child’s “environment of relationships” on developing brain architecture during the first months and years of life. We have long known that interactions with parents, caregivers, and other adults are important in a child’s life, but new evidence shows that these relationships actually shape brain circuits and lay the foundation for later developmental outcomes, from academic performance and interpersonal skills to physical and mental health.”

So with this backdrop, I want to suggest three reasons that early education matters and why it is important to you, regardless of your vocation or where you are in your life span.

First, having children who have well developed brains when they enter school will benefit our public schools and reduce intervention costs later on. Many of you are now, or will be working in the field of education at a variety of levels. It is important to recognize that all the learning that occurs in the public school and university years is built on the foundation of the early years. If that foundation is weak, our school systems must spend much more in intervention costs than it would cost to invest in high quality early education for all children from the beginning.

Parents and other family members are the most important teachers of young children and their impact begins even before birth. In addition to families, long-term studies prove that school–related outcomes for children who were in high quality early childhood programs prior to formal school are far better than the outcomes of those who did not have this advantage. They have higher test scores, less grade retention, and higher graduation rates, to name a few. All young children, especially our most vulnerable children, should be provided high quality early learning experiences for their own benefit and to improve our public schools and universities, as well as the future workforce.

A second reason that early education matters is because of its demonstrated impact on good citizenship. Future citizens will be better community members if they start out in life with high quality early experiences and education. Long-term studies of children who were in high quality early childhood programs have demonstrated, with over 40 years of evidence, that children in high quality early learning programs are less likely to commit crimes or become chronic lawbreakers; more likely to be employed and earn more money; less likely to need public and social supports; more likely to own their own homes and to delay parenting until adulthood. I don’t know of any other strategy that gives those kinds of results.

When I was leading Smart Start in North Carolina, the head of our Juvenile Justice System there, was fond of telling me, if I did my job, he could retire. And he firmly believed it. He was a former police chief in Winston-Salem and had seen the world from a very different perspective. He knew that what happens in the high chair, in large part determines who and what a child will become. Is there anything more important to society than preparing the next generation to be good citizens?

A third reason that early education matters is because it makes economic sense. There is a cost-benefit to the public in providing high quality early learning. Studies show savings ranging from $1 to $16 for every $1 invested in high quality early childhood programs. Our business leaders remind us that we have to make investment decisions on the front end in order to get good results later on.

Dr. Jim Heckman, a Nobel Laureate and prize-winning economist, has spent his life studying financial models that make the most economic sense to society. He looked at various early interventions, such as pupil to teacher ratios, public job training, convict rehab programs, tuition subsidies, and police expenditures, only to later discover early childhood education, and he is so convinced that early learning is the best investment that can be made, that he has dedicated the rest of his life to helping the world understand the significant nature of the relationship between early learning and the economic success of our nation.

Dr. Heckman said, “If a child is not motivated and stimulated to learn and engage early on in life, the more likely it is that when the child becomes an adult, he/she will fail in social and economic life. The longer we wait to intervene in the lifecycle of a child, the more costly it is to remediate to restore the child to her/his full potential.”…..if indeed that is possible!

Recently, a study was conducted by the Rand Corporation for the state of California and found that any investments of public money toward early education would pay for themselves by the time a child reached middle school. It’s hard to argue with that rate of return on investment.

Early education builds good brains; benefits our schools and businesses; reduces the need for intervention costs; builds stronger communities; and saves money in the long run—- it literally matters to all of us.

So what does this knowledge mean to you as you reach another milestone in your own education? The knowledge that nurturing, protective relationships for young children translate into mentally and emotionally healthy adults, speaks to the critical roles you can play in encouraging and engaging with your own children or children in your family. For example, the early language skill of children (how many words they know and understand) is the strongest indicator of their ability to read later on. This knowledge should motivate each of us to positively engage with and read to young children every day, beginning at birth.

What we’ve learned about early education also has value to you as a citizen. Society is dependent on individuals to maintain the delicate balance that keeps us all safe, secure, and with the ability to thrive. Being a responsible citizen doesn’t happen by chance, and we know scientifically now what we had suspected, that the early years set the trajectory toward success or failure. I hope that each of you will care about and be involved in decisions about early learning, family support and health programs that are needed within your community to assist vulnerable children who may start life with significant challenges. It is in their best interest and in yours to do so.

As you leave this place today, I encourage you to think again about the person or people who helped give you a good start in life and commit to paying that forward by helping other children achieve what you have achieved. You can be a significant part of the village or community needed to help children thrive, regardless of where your path may lead…..in your family and community, in your school or university, or in your business. Our culture has swung so far to the side of personal entitlement, but wise people understand that personal satisfaction actually comes from giving to others…..giving to the most vulnerable people in our society, our children, is indeed the work of champions.

Helen Keller once said that many people have a wrong idea of what constitutes true happiness. She said, “Happiness is not attained through self-gratification but through fidelity to a worthy purpose.”

I wish for each of you a worthy purpose and the very best as you leave this place today, and I will look forward to hearing great things about your success and the ways you’ve chosen to give back.

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Office of Child Care Recommends Background Checks on Child Care Providers

Thursday, December 01st, 2011 | Author: Tracy

The Office of Child Care (OCC), Administration for Children and Families of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) released an Information Memorandum recommending that states conduct comprehensive background checks on all child care providers paid with funding from the Child Care Development Fund (CCDF).

Specifically, the memo states, “OCC strongly recommends that all providers serving children receiving assistance through the CCDF, regardless of whether they are required to be licensed, undergo a comprehensive background check. In addition, any other persons who have regular unsupervised access to children in these child care settings should be required to undergo comprehensive criminal background checks.”

In addition, the US Government Accountability Office (GAO) recently released a report, “Child Care: Overview of Relevant Employment Laws and Cases of Sex Offenders at Child Care Facilities,” that shows federal and state laws failed to keep sex offenders out of child care facilities, including child care facilities receiving federal funding.

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Smart investments can help reduce poverty among children

Tuesday, November 08th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

(Action for Children) A new report released by the U.S. Census Bureau Monday suggests more Americans are living in poverty than previously thought. The Supplemental Poverty Measure (SPM), finds 49.1 million Americans (16%) now live in poverty, a slight increase from the 46.6 million (15%) thought to be poor under the traditional measure of poverty.  

While the overall number of Americans living in poverty increases under the SPM, the number of children living in poverty actually drops from 16.8 million children (22.5%) to 13.6 million (18.2%) under the new measure.  This decline is due to differences in how the SPM calculates poverty.

While the traditional poverty measure examines only gross income, the SPM compares the bills families must pay, food, clothing, shelter and utilities, and the resources they have available to pay them.  The SPM excludes expenses that reduce resources, such as payroll taxes, transportation costs or medical expenses, and adjusts for differences in housing status and cost of living by geography.

The result is a more sophisticated picture of what it takes to make ends meet in America, and the resources available to help vulnerable children and families do just that. In 2010, the official poverty threshold for two adults and 2 children was $22,113, the supplemental threshold was $24,343.

These figures highlight the importance of anti-poverty programs in alleviating economic hardship among children.  According to SPM analysis, the Earned Income Tax Credit, a refundable federal income tax credit for low- and moderate- income working individuals, helps to reduce child poverty by 4.2 percentage points. The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, which helps low income families meet their food costs, improves the child poverty rate by 3 percentage points.  

Barb Bradley, President & CEO of Action for Children North Carolina, a statewide policy and advocacy organization dedicated to improving outcomes for children in North Carolina offered the following statement in response to the new poverty figures:

“While far too many children are considered poor, even under these new estimates, these data show what many advocates have been saying all along: smart investments can help reduce poverty among children. These findings are significant for a number of reasons. Research indicates that poverty is the single greatest threat to the well-being of children. The experience of poverty during childhood, particularly during the critical period between birth and age five, has been associated with poorer academic performance, reduced health and lower earnings potential later in life. 

While these estimates show the social safety net helps to lift many children out of poverty, they also indicate that child poverty is on the rise.  In 2009, the SPM estimated 17.3% of American children lived in poverty.  Last year, that percentage grew to 18.2%.

“Reducing poverty is good policy. Not only does it improve the health and well-being of our children in the short run, it bolsters the economic strength of our country in the long-run by helping us to create the healthy, well-educated workforce we need to keep the economy moving and to drive innovation.”

The supplemental poverty measure does not replace the official poverty measure, and will not be used to determine program eligibility or resource allocation.  Instead, the SPM helps improve existing knowledge by quantifying the impact of social safety net programs in reducing economic hardship for vulnerable children and families.

The Research Supplemental Poverty Measure: 2010 is available online at http://www.census.gov/prod/2011pubs/p60-241.pdf.

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NYT’s Kristoff Says “Occupy the Classroom”

Thursday, October 20th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

In yesterday’s New York Times, Nicholas Kristoff proposes that Occupy Wall Street needs to evolve to Occupy the Classroom. He writes:

Most of the proposed remedies involve changes in taxes and regulations, and they would help. But the single step that would do the most to reduce inequality has nothing to do with finance at all. It’s an expansion of early childhood education.

He quotes Kathleen McCartney, the dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Education who says, “This is where inequality starts.”

He quotes Nobel Prize-winning economist James Heckman who says, “Schooling after the second grade plays only a minor role in creating or reducing gaps.”

He concludes, “the question isn’t whether we can afford early childhood education, but whether we can afford not to provide it. We can pay for prisons or we can pay, less, for early childhood education to help build a fairer and more equitable nation.”

Economists, the Federal Reserve Chairman, military leaders, law enforcement, business leaders, and many others are recognizing that early childhood education is paramount to our country’s future. Yet many states have cut back on these investments, a move that will surely cost us more later.

UPDATE: Tim Bartik, economist and author of Investing in Kids, delves into the question, “How much can early childhood education do to reduce income inequality?” Read his blog post and find out the answer!

Read “Occupy the Classroom.”

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40% of Children Live in Working Poor Families

Friday, September 30th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

 A new report, Living on the Edge: America’s Low-Earning Families,  finds that 40 percent of all children – 30 million kids – grow up in households in which their parents are employed, yet the family still struggles with making ends meet.

The report concludes by answering the question, “What should be taken from this unfolding story about America’s low earning families?”

  • First, the importance of a sharper account of who the “squeezed middle? are and what has been happening to them, as part of a wider story about the state of working America today. Here the focus needs to be on how overall standards of living are changing – rather than on income alone. Those seeking to tackle child poverty need now to direct their efforts at the world of work, as well as at the world of welfare.
  • Second, that however global the changes that are affecting low paid workers, there is still a central role for government, and for social and economic policies that protect against the vagaries of such changes.
  • Finally, there is a lesson about the goal to aim for. It is easy to fall into a trap of thinking that the central question is one of deficit reduction versus growth. The focus instead needs to be on fostering a broad-based prosperity – a prosperity that will provide low- and middle-income families with the economic security that has been seized from them over the last generation and create a prosperous future for today’s children.

Download the report.

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Nobel Prize-Winning Economist Says Deficit Reduction Plan Must Include Early Childhood Investments

Monday, September 26th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

Nobel Prize-winning economist Professor James Heckman has some advice for the “Super Committee,” the 12 Senators and Representatives charged with finding an additional $1.5 trillion in debt savings over a ten-year period: think differently, stop doing things that do not work and to invest in things that do.

In a letter to the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, Professor Heckman tells members to increase productivity and reduce deficits they need to remember the following principles:

  • Early childhood development deserves more resources, not less.
  • Investments in quality early childhood development more than pay for themselves.
  • We can gain money by investing early to close disparities and prevent achievement gaps, or we can continue to drive up deficit spending by paying to remediate disparities when they are harder and more expensive to close.
  • Early childhood health is critical to reducing deficits.
  • Invest money in quality programs
  • The federal government can and should incentivize the development of comprehensive state systems that focus on providing quality care for the children most at risk.
  • Expand upon proven models.
  • Funding for an improved Head Start and Early Head Start, as well as the Child Care and Development Block Grant, is essential and should be used to spur public/private collaboration on program replication.
  • Collect, align and analyze data from cradle to college and career.
  • Engage the private sector.

Read Professor Heckman’s letter.

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Early childhood education investments drive better local job creation

Friday, September 16th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

Tim Bartik, author of Investing in Kids, explains why investing in early childhood education can drive better local job creation. His top five reasons are:

  • Human capital is the key local competitive factor for businesses that is not readily portable.
  • Human capital matters not just to my individual business, but to building regional clusters of businesses.
  • Early childhood education is one of the most cost-effective methods of developing better local worker skills.
  • Early childhood education is particularly good at increasing soft skills, which are of great importance to businesses.
  • A large percentage of early childhood education participants will stay in the same local economy as working adults.

For an explanation of each reason and more information, read Tim’s post.

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The Impact of Family Income on Child Achievement

Thursday, July 28th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

The National Bureau of Economic Research has a new working paper, The Impact of Family Income on Child Achievement: Evidence from the Earned Income Tax Credit.

Here’s an excerpt from the abstract:

“Our baseline estimates imply that a $1,000 increase in income raises combined math and reading test scores by 6% of a standard deviation in the short-run. Test gains are larger for children from disadvantaged families and are robust to a variety of alternative specifications.”

Download the paper.

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“Investing in Kids” Issue Brief

Wednesday, July 27th, 2011 | Author: Tracy

The Partnership for America’s Economic Success, a project of the Pew Center on the States, has written a short issue brief summarizing Tim Bartik’s book “Investing in Kids”.

Here’s what Michael Mandel, former Chief Economist at Business Week had to say about the book.

“Bartik’s new book is a comprehensive and compelling argument for a one-two economic devellopment punch: how state and local governments need to combine both tax incentives for businesses and investment in early childhood education.”

Download the issue brief.

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