Jennifer Garner Stresses Early Education With US Governors

Actress Jennifer Garner says growing up “surrounded by generational, rural poverty” in West Virginia inspired her to become an advocate for early-childhood education.Jennifer Garner

Garner spoke at a meeting of the National Governors Association on Saturday about programs that bring educators into the homes of low-income parents to help them get their kids ready for kindergarten. At one point, her microphone was cut off and she said, “It’s like the Oscars!”

Garner says kids who don’t come to school prepared face huge disadvantages later in life. She says she saw it growing up, when kids stopped showing up at school and “disappeared off the face of the earth.”

She says intervention can make a difference with parents who lack the resources to help their kids’ developing brains.

W.Va. Not Alone in Battle Against Opioid Addiction

We all worry about national security. We worry about ISIS and terrorism and cyber security, but the enemy within the nation is the addiction issues of our population and how it's ruining lives. – Gov. Mary Fallin, Oklahoma

According to a report by the nonprofit groups Trust for American’s Health and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, West Virginia has the highest rate of overdose deaths in the country, about 34 for every 100,000 people. The state is working to find ways to reduce those rates, but is not alone in its work. States across the country are grappling with the same problems. 

Oklahoma saw a record number of overdose deaths in 2014, reaching 864 that year. Neighboring Kentucky reported nearly 1,000 in the same year, more than half of which were due to prescription narcotics and heroin.

“Well, we’ve got a tremendous problem all across the country,” Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear said after a meeting of the National Governor’s Association focused on the nation’s opioid epidemic.   

At that meeting, a group of governors from across the country heard from Dr. Deborah Houry, director of the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

“In the year 2012, there were 259 million prescriptions for opioids,” Houry reported. “To put that into perspective, that’s enough for every single U.S. adult to have their own bottle of pills.”

In 2012, doctors in the U.S. wrote 259 million prescriptions for opioids, enough for every adult in the country to have their own bottle of pills.

Houry said as the number of prescribed narcotics rose between 1999 and 2012, the number of overdose deaths grew as well. Now, overdose death outnumber deaths from car crashes in more than 30 states.

“Think how much money we spend to keep our roads safe,” Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy said after Houry’s presentation. “Whether it’s on snow removal or writing tickets or having police on the streest, we do everything we can to prevent those [deaths].”

“We’re now seeing an increase in death as a result primarily in heroin and opioid use and we’ve just got to step up our game.”

Credit National Governors Association
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Gov. Tomblin during a meeting of the NGA Health and Human Resources Committee.

The tactics used in West Virginia to curb abuse are not unlike those used in states across the country. During the 2015 legislative session, lawmakers approved bills to increase access to the life saving drug Naloxone, which reverses the effects of an overdose, and extend some immunities to people who stay with an overdose patient and cooperate with first responders, known as Good Samaritan laws.

Next, the state will look to needle exchange programs to cut down on outbreaks of Hepatitis B & C, diseases associated with intravenous drug use, with a pilot program in Cabell County this fall.

Beshear said Kentucky is starting to see success with a similar needle exchange program in his state, and recently implemented a mandatory prescription reporting system to cut down on doctor shopping. 

“Now every doctor, before they write that prescription in Kentucky, has to plug that information in to the system and they can tell if that person has just been prescribed a drug some place else,” he said.

Other states have implemented similar programs, including Connecticut. Malloy said his state is working with other New England states to take on the problem of doctor shopping from a regional perspective.

W.Va. Gets Funding for Workforce Development

  West Virginia is receiving $10,000 in funding to help expand workforce education and training program.

Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin said the state was selected for a grant from the National Governors Association.

Officials say 44 percent of job openings in West Virginia in the next 10 years will require more than a high school education, but less than a four-year degree.

The funding will help tailor education and training programs to meet state-specific needs and integrate education and workforce data to increase training opportunities.

Money also will be used to strengthen and build new partnerships between industry and education.

In addition to the grant, West Virginia also will receive as technical assistance from the National Governors Association’s Center for Best Practices and outside experts.

Early Education priority for lawmakers

Only days into the 2013 Legislative session, it became obvious to those eyeing the halls of the state Capitol it would be the year of Education Reform. With the passage of the governor’s bill, immediate steps were taken to improve student achievement, but some steps couldn’t be implemented so quickly. Legislators are still learning how they can help improve early childhood education in West Virginia.

The most critical years in learning come from birth to the third grade. That’s what members of the National Governor’s Association’s Division of Education told state lawmakers this week.

They presented trends and data showing just how crucial these years can be and suggested they become the priority for West Virginia’s education system moving forward.

Albert Wat is a senior policy analyst for the division.

“All of this is to say that the first 8 years, based on these data and trends and based on what we know about brain development, is extremely important in terms of setting a foundation, either weak or strong, in terms of success,” he told lawmakers Wednesday.

Wat presented data on early education from across the country to the Joint Committee on Education, starting with graduation rates. Nationwide, Wat said 22 percent of low-income students fail to graduate by the age of 19.

“The good news is that if kids of any income levels are proficient at reading by third grade, so for low income kids if they’re proficient in reading by third grade,” he said, “their rates of not graduating by the age of 19, so the failure rate if you want to call it that, basically is reduced by half.”

Wat’s data shows the rate drops to 11 percent for low income kids, and from 6 percent to just 2 percent for children from higher income families.

The data supports the importance of meeting that benchmark, unfortunately, Wat said it’s not being met across the country. At least not yet.

“The bad news is that even though that’s such an important benchmark, in our nation two-thirds of our fourth graders are not performing at a proficient level in terms of reading,” he said.

That very benchmark, for a child to be proficient in reading by the third grade, was set forth as a goal for the state by Governor Tomblin earlier this year when he signed the education reform bill.  

Even though there is a strong focus on reading, Wat said STEM—science, technology, engineering and math education—are still priorities.

“There’s a little bit of a lag in terms of policy, but there’s a lot of research about how much kids can learn in the early years, before third grade even before kindergarten, in terms of math that we’re not taking advantage of,” Wat said.

“The way that we’re training teachers and the curriculum we’re using is really dumbing down the content that kinds can learn.”

It extends beyond the reading, writing, and math that are traditionally taught in school. Wat said today, effective teachers are learning to teach kids at these young ages more cognitive, critical thinking and even emotional lessons to educate the whole child.

So how do we provide children a strong education base at a younger age? Wat said it starts with the teachers.

“I think that the notion is that these grades are easy to teach. If you know how to add one plus one, then you should be able to teach math in the first grade which is not true,” he said. “So, I think we need to really need to pay more attention to the quality of instruction in these grades.”

The way to do that, Wat said, is with a proper teacher evaluation system, one that is adapted to focus on the needs of early education, and continuous professional development that allows teachers to learn nationwide best practices for young students and put them to use.

But it’s not just teachers. Sarah Silverman, program director of the NGA’s Education Division, said principals play a crucial role as well.

She suggested those overseeing pre-K through third grades should have clinical experience with early grade levels and should be evaluated on how well they are able to assist their teachers in continuing focus on those critical ages.
 

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