Pre-K Disparities
What You Get Depends on Where You Live
July 20, 2011
When we analyzed the data for The State of Preschool 2010, a disturbing trend that we noticed the previous year continued to appear: during these difficult economic times, disparities among states in providing high-quality preschool education are growing larger. Consequently, children’s access to and quality of experiences in preschool vary drastically depending on where they reside. For instance, a relatively small percentage of children (6 percent) in Alabama have access to a high-quality program (meeting all 10 of NIEER’s quality benchmarks) while their peers to the south in neighboring Florida have a better chance of having access (68 percent) to a lower quality program (meeting only three of 10 benchmarks). Alabama’s neighbors to the west in Mississippi have no state-funded preschool program at all to attend. This problem is not limited to the deep South – patterns like this repeat across the country. And tight state budgets are only exacerbating the problem.
While some states continued to move forward during the recession, others fell further behind, and some have dropped precipitously. Oklahoma remains the only state where almost every child has the opportunity to attend a quality preschool education program at age 4, but other states are at least approaching the goal of offering some state-funded education program to all children. In 10 states, the majority of children attend a public preschool program of some kind (see Table 1). At the other end of the spectrum, 10 states have no regular state preschool education program, although children may receive early learning experiences through Head Start and special education (see Table 2). In six states, fewer than 15 percent of 4-year-old children are enrolled in any public preschool program including Head Start.
Table 1: Top 10 States Serving 4-Year-Olds in State Pre-K
State | Percent of 4-year-olds served | ||
State Pre-K | State Pre-K and Special Education | State Pre-K, Special Education, and Head Start | |
Oklahoma* | 71 | 71 | 86 |
Florida | 68 | 70 | 78 |
West Virginia | 55 | 57 | 78 |
Georgia | 55 | 57 | 63 |
Vermont | 52 | 61 | 69 |
Wisconsin | 52 | 55 | 63 |
Texas | 47 | 48 | 57 |
New York | 45 | 51 | 59 |
Arkansas | 41 | 50 | 60 |
Iowa | 38 | 43 | 51 |
* All 4-year-old special education children in Oklahoma are in the state pre-K program.
Table 2: No-Program States
State | Percent of 4-year-olds served | |
Special Education | Special Education and Head Start | |
Hawaii | 5 | 15 |
Idaho | 6 | 15 |
Indiana | 7 | 15 |
Mississippi | 7 | 37 |
Montana | 5 | 22 |
New Hampshire | 7 | 11 |
North Dakota | 7 | 24 |
South Dakota | 8 | 25 |
Utah | 6 | 13 |
Wyoming | 17 | 26 |
Other important disparities across the states include:
• State spending ranged from less than $1 million in Arizona to more than $790 million in both California and Texas. Ten states spent nothing on state pre-K.
• For states with initiatives, state funding per child exceeded $5,000 per child in 13 states, while in six others it fell below $2,500.
• Most states failed to meet NIEER benchmarks for teacher and assistant teacher qualifications. Seven states had programs that met fewer than half of our benchmarks for quality standards. The states failing to meet most benchmarks include three of the four states with the largest number of children — California, Florida, and Texas.
• There are no maximum class sizes or limits on staff-child ratios in Texas, the only state that fails to set either. California and Maine have limits on staff-child ratios but no class size limit. Most other states limit classes to 20 or fewer children with a teacher and an assistant.
3-Year-Olds Losing Ground?
Disparities aren’t limited only to geography but also extend to age – by and large, state preschool programs are for 4-year-olds. Even in states that enroll high percentages of their 4-year-old population, 3-year-olds have little or no access to state-funded preschool education.
Already low, enrollment of 3-year-olds decreased during the 2009-2010 school year, reversing an upward trend since the 2003-2004 school year. State pre-K programs served 170,885 3-year-olds, a decrease of almost 5,000 children from the previous year. Only 4.1 percent of the nation’s 3-year-olds are served in state-funded pre-K, meaning that even small declines in service provision can be dramatic. Thirteen states decreased their enrollment of 3-year-olds while11 states increased.
Illinois, New Jersey, and Vermont are clear leaders in enrollment of 3-year-olds (see Table 3), although no state serves even a quarter of their children in state pre-K at age 3. However, while Illinois is still the leader in serving 3-year-olds, the state actually declined in the percentage of 3-year-olds served from the 2008-2009 school year to the 2009-2010 school year.
Even when accounting for state pre-K, special education, and Head Start enrollment, only Vermont, Illinois, and New Jersey serve more than a quarter of their 3-year-old population. Arkansas is close behind with 24.5 percent of their 3-year-olds served through the state pre-K, special education, and Head Start programs. Interestingly, although it does not have a state-funded pre-K program, Mississippi serves more than a quarter of their 3-year-olds in Head Start and special education, surpassing most states that do have state-funded pre-K with access for 3-year-olds.
Table 3: Top 5 States Serving 3-Year-Olds in State Pre-K
State | Percent of 3-Year-Olds Served | ||
State Pre-K | State Pre-K and Special Education | State Pre-K, Special Education, and Head Start | |
Illinois | 19 | 21 | 29 |
New Jersey | 18 | 22 | 28 |
Vermont | 17 | 25 | 29 |
Nebraska | 11 | 13 | 18 |
Kentucky* | 10 | 10 | 20 |
* All 3-year-old children in Kentucky’s preschool program are special education students who have either a developmental delay or an identified disability.
While we are encouraged by success stories such as Oklahoma’s near universal status with a high-quality program and West Virginia’s move toward a high-quality universal program, we are troubled by the fact that many children are growing up in states with little or no access to preschool education or access to programs of low quality. As the expression goes, states are the laboratories of democracy, but wide disparities in educational opportunities for children bring to mind mad scientists rather than the Curies. We remain concerned as pre-K programs face difficult budget choices that can exacerbate today’s disparities and hope all stakeholders can work together to preserve the future for the youngest learners.
– Jen Fitzgerald, Public Information Officer, NIEER
– Megan Carolan, Policy Research Coordinator, NIEER
About NIEER
The National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER) at the Graduate School of Education, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ, conducts and disseminates independent research and analysis to inform early childhood education policy.