State Pre-K Program Continues To Rank High Nationally

West Virginia once again scored well in the latest State of Pre-K report from the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University.

West Virginia once again scored well in the latest State of Pre-K report from the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University. The institute, known as NIEER, has been advocating for universal pre-K and grading each state’s existing program for 20 years. 

West Virginia moved from 6th to 4th in the nation for preschool enrollment for 4-year-olds, serving 67 percent of this age group in the state, nearly double the national enrollment.

Steven Barnett, founder and senior co-director of NIERR, said enrollment is up nationwide.

“In nearly every state, enrollment was also up over the previous year,” he said. “‘Enrollment increased by 7 percent year over year. The percentage of 4-year-olds is 35 percent, 3-year-olds – 7 percent enrolled. In terms of the percentage served, these are new records.”

The state’s 3-year-old enrollment matched the national average, at 7 percent and brought the year’s total enrollment to 13,731.

“West Virginia continues to be a leader in early childhood education, creating foundational learning opportunities for our most precious resources,” said Michele Blatt, state superintendent of schools. “Early learning has a vast impact on the growth and development of our children and the future of the Mountain State. Access to pre-K education provides families and students an introduction to lifelong learning.”

The state’s program once again met nine out of 10 NIERR benchmark standards criteria, which include student to teacher ratios, teacher specialized training and maximum class sizes. The only missed benchmark for West Virginia is staff professional development for teachers and assistants.

Allison Friedman-Krauss, assistant research professor at NIEER, said training and support is more important than ever amidst a growing teacher shortage.

“We’ve seen again this year, widespread reports of teacher shortages,” she said. “To date, the most frequent response to teacher shortages has been to allow less qualified teachers in the classroom.”

State spending on pre-K increased by $4 million, and per child spending equaled $7,053 in 2022-2023, a slight increase from the previous year.

State’s Pre-K Program Ranks Among Top In Country

West Virginia has not fared well in recent national rankings of educational success. However, a recent report on the country’s pre-kindergarten programs ranked the state among the best in the nation. 

West Virginia has not fared well in recent national rankings of educational success. However, a recent report on the country’s pre-kindergarten programs ranked the state among the best in the nation. 

In May, the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University released its State of Pre-K report. The institute, known as NIEER, has been advocating for universal pre-K and grading each state’s existing program for 20 years. 

States are rated on factors such as curriculum supports, staff to child ratio and teacher specialized training. This year, West Virginia scored a 9 out of 10, placing it behind just two states in the quality of its pre-K program. 

One of the key factors in assessing a universal pre-K system is access. With 63 percent of the state’s four-year-olds enrolled in pre-K, West Virginia has the sixth best access in the country.

Kaylee Rosencrance, a preschool special needs teacher in Randolph County, was recently surprised to learn that not all states in the country offer the same level of access to their youngest learners.

“After looking into different states, I was actually so surprised that there were not public preschool programs,” she said.

Rosencrance said she uses a learning system called High Scope in her classroom, which helps her students integrate events from their life into their play, which is the main learning mode. 

“We just incorporate learning into their everyday routine. So within those small groups, and during that work time, the teacher and the assistant are actively engaged in asking questions, trying to further their thinking as to what they’re doing,” she said. “And although they are playing, they are still learning.”

For Rosencrance, one of the biggest pieces to her success is the support she receives. She works closely with Head Start, the federal program that provides comprehensive early childhood education, health, nutrition, and parent involvement services to low-income children and families. Rosencrance also has regular opportunities to work with colleagues and support staff at both the local and state level.

“The support that we have as preschool teachers here in Randolph County is huge. Our state department supports our county and then our county supports preschool staff,” she said. “It’s really like a ripple effect of when you have support from the top. It really helps us here in the classroom.” 

Pre-K Coordinator for the West Virginia Department of Education Janet Bock-Hager’s office provides state-level support to classrooms like Rosencrance’s. Bock-Hager credits the county teams, which include teachers, a pre-K coordinator and a Head Start representative for driving and innovating the state’s pre-K curriculum.

“They take state pre-K policy and state pre-K standards, and implement those and the state team provides individualized support to those counties upon request,” she said. “We also go out and visit each program a minimum of once every three years with our pre-K program reviews.”

Bock-Hager said the state’s current success is the culmination of 20 years of work, starting with the passage of Senate Bill 247 by the West Virginia Legislature in 2002.

“No matter where you live, you are offered universal pre-K in the state of West Virginia. It’s been in full implementation since the 2012-2013 school year,” she said. “It’s based on legislation that was passed in 2002 and counties had 10 years to build their pre-K systems. But in West Virginia, we have a mandate to collaborate with existing programs.”

The requirements of that law including curriculum, a universal enrollment process and transition plans to support families and children as they move into and out of pre-K have fostered strong collaboration across all programs and levels in the state.

Melissa Sherfinski, an associate professor of early childhood and elementary education at West Virginia University, studies pre-K programs in several states, and she said one of West Virginia’s strengths is the integration of Head Start.

“What that does is it helps to bring kids of all different income levels together, mixed in the same classrooms,” she said.

Sherfinski said the state’s integration of Head Start into all pre-K classrooms has created a collaborative way of doing universal pre-K that opens up opportunities for all students. She also said the use of play-based learning is crucial.

“They can use their communication skills with others, they can gain that confidence by taking up that new persona, and they can imagine what or who they might be in very creative ways,” Sherfinski said. “They kind of metaphorically stand on the shoulders of their peers. Socio-dramatic play is a wonderful way for children to be able to learn from one another, and to begin to cooperate, and to come up with ideas together.” 

While other educators are focused on expanding the pre-K program’s successes into other grade levels, Sherfinski’s biggest concern is influence in the other direction, what’s called “curriculum pushdown.”

“People are beginning to question whether pre-K is not the new first grade with all of the heightened expectations, and especially post-pandemic, all of the concerns about learning loss for children,” she said. “I think it is so important not to forget that young children are young children. We want to do everything we can to support who they’re becoming, but at the same time they’re being, and they need to be in joyful environments.”

For now, Sherfinski has not seen evidence that curriculum pushdown is manifesting in West Virginia’s schools, but work to improve the state’s program is continuous. That includes efforts to expand universal education to three-year-olds. The NIERR report did identify one category in which it would like to see West Virginia improve: Staff professional development. Sherfinski agrees.

“I think some districts can do that really well, and I think that some struggle more. I would guess that funding is a large part of that,” she said. “That’s a really good opportunity for folks to work towards and expand, and I think they are working to do that.”

Despite its 20 years of buildup, it will be several more years before studies can be done on the long-range impacts of universal pre-K. The first students to go through the universal program are only now starting high school, but Rosencrance said she hears every year from Kindergarten teachers about the difference a good pre-K experience can make for students.

As Child Care Costs Soar, Public Preschool Spots are Limited

In perhaps an unexpected twist, historically conservative strongholds like Oklahoma and West Virginia are leading efforts to bring preschool to all.

“They have in common a low-wage workforce, relatively low education levels and the desire to change that,” said Steven Barnett of the National Institute for Early Education Research. “Whatever they say, politicians in West Virginia know the future of their state is not coal miners.”

Other red states that have notable programs include Alabama and Georgia. But some liberal-leaning cities like Seattle and New York also are running public pre-K programs.

Advocates say more universal programs are needed to address what they call an alarming increase in child care costs. Studies have shown that children who attend a high-quality preschool are more adjusted for the rest of their academic lives and have better outcomes as adults, from higher incomes to healthier lifestyles.

Around the country, some budding programs say there are not enough seats to meet demand and not enough money to make it happen.

Programs in Seattle and New York enjoy overwhelming support locally, which in turn puts pressure on their state lawmakers to act as they face growing inequity in public education and research that touts the benefits of high-quality education in the critical early years.

“Clearly, a statewide program would be so much better, and it should be available to all 3- and 4-year-olds. It’s the best investment we can make to right the wrongs of generations,” said Tim Burgess, a retired Seattle mayor and city councilman credited with creating the Seattle Preschool Program.

It is now in its third year, serving 979 children with a sliding scale tuition model. About 80 percent of them go for free. Burgess is now pushing for a universal statewide offering in Washington, beyond its program for low-income children.

Aanchal Mehrotra’s 4-year-old son is one of 300 kids now on the waiting list for the Seattle Preschool Program, but she says she doesn’t have much hope that he’ll get in. The Seattle preschool class would cost the family just $365 a month. She’s paying almost four times that much for a month at a private day care franchise.

“It’s so expensive and become so difficult to afford,” said Mehrotra, a research scientist. “I’m just waiting for him to turn 5 so he can get into kindergarten.”

The universal preschool movement hit peak momentum under the Obama administration but has been virtually unaddressed by President Donald Trump. Instead, Trump’s daughter and adviser Ivanka Trump has dabbled with policies aimed at tackling child care costs.

A report by Democrats on the Joint Economic Committee in Congress this year indicated that less than half of the nation’s 3- and 4-year-olds were in a pre-K program, ranging from 75 percent in Washington, D.C., to just 30 percent in Idaho.

The programs vary in quality and structure, with some offering just a few hours a week of learning sessions and others that are more similar to a full school day.

One of the central goals of preschool is social development, which advocates say will help children get adjusted to learning in a structured setting and is especially important for low-income children.

But for many families, cost is a major factor.

Child Care Aware of America reports that the average cost of child care per year for a 4-year-old in a licensed facility ranged from $14,000 in Massachusetts to $4,500 in Mississippi.

In Oklahoma and West Virginia, preschool is offered to virtually all 4-year-olds.

West Virginia’s program last year cost $142 million — nearly a third of which was covered through federal funding — to educate 14,940 children, including 3-year-olds with special needs and all 4-year-olds.

The program was built up slowly over the past decade through layers of legislative wins that strengthened accessibility, partnerships, and most critically, funding.

“We have some very dedicated champions at the Legislature who really felt the need to look at the welfare of the children in our state,” said Monica DellaMea, who oversees early learning at the state education department.

Access to preschool is also widely available in Washington, D.C., Vermont and Florida.

Though other cities and states have been able to launch preschool programs, funding often limits access, creating programs for the poor or disabled or limited to a certain district — instead of a truly universal one.

That’s the case in Washington state, where only 9 percent of 4-year-olds were enrolled in preschool in 2016, according to National Institute for Early Education Research.

“For a decade, nothing has really changed in terms of access for the non-poor working families,” Barnett said.

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