Thursday, August 18, 2011

Preschool: The Best Job-Training Program

When economist James Heckman was studying the effects of job training programs on unskilled young workers, he found a mystery.

He was comparing a group of workers that had gone through a job training program with a group that hadn't. And he found that, at best, the training program did nothing to help the workers get better jobs. In some cases, the training program even made the workers worse off.
The problem was that the students in the training program couldn't learn what they were being taught. They lacked an important set of skills which would enable them to learn new things. Heckman, a Nobel-Prize-winning economist, calls these soft skills.

You might not think of soft skills as skills at all. They involve things like being able to pay attention and focus, being curious and open to new experiences, and being able to control your temper and not get frustrated.

All these soft skills are very important in getting a job. And Heckman discovered that you don't get them in high school, or in middle school, or even in elementary school. You get them in preschool.

And that, according to Heckman, makes preschool one of the most effective job-training programs out there.

As evidence, he points to the Perry Preschool Project, an experiment done in the early 1960s in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Researchers took a bunch of 3- and 4-year-old kids from poor families and randomly assigned them to one of two groups. The kids in one group just lived their regular lives. And the kids in the other group went to preschool for two hours a day, five days a week.
After preschool, both groups went into the same regular Ypsilanti public school system and grew up side by side into adulthood.

Yet when researchers followed up with the kids as adults, they found huge differences. At age 27, the boys who had – almost two decades earlier – gone to preschool were now half as likely to be arrested and earned 50 percent more in salary that those who didn't.

And that wasn't all. At 27, girls who went to preschool were 50 percent more likely to have a savings account and 20 percent more likely to have a car. In general, the preschool kids got sick less often, were unemployed less often, and went to jail less often. Since then, many other studies have reported similar findings.

These results made me think: What is going on in preschool?

So I visited the Co-Op School, a preschool in Brooklyn. Eliza Cutler, a teacher there, said the kids do a lot of the same things the Perry Preschool kids did back in the 60s: They play, they paint, they build with blocks, and they nap.

If you didn't know where to look, you wouldn't see the job skills they're learning.
Yet they are learning valuable skills: how to resolve conflicts, how to share, how to negotiate, how to talk things out. These are skills that they need to make it through a day of preschool now. And they are skills they will need to make it through a day of work when they're 30.
If they learn these skills now, they'll have them for the rest of their lives. But research shows that if they don't learn them now, it becomes harder and harder as they get older. By the time the time they're in a job training program in their twenties, it's often too late.
Heckman is an economist so he thinks about this as a cost-benefit analysis. To him, the message is clear: If you want 21 year-olds to have jobs, the best time to train them is in the first few years of life.

For more, see these studies:
A New Cost-Benefit and Rate of Return Analysis for the Perry Preschool Program: A Summary
The Productivity Argument for Investing in Young Children
Analyzing Social Experiments as Implemented: A Reexamination of the Evidence from the HighScope Perry Preschool Program

Broadcast on NPR 8-17-11

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

new MEDIA Limits

ITERS states NO media time for under 24 months. For 2+years and ECERS, time is limited to 30 minutes TOTAL once a week. This includes 15 minutes per day max. for computer use. And NONE during meals.

ITERS Art should NOT smell like FOOD

Materials that emit food related odors are not given credit (CERTAIN BRANDS of markers, playdough, crayons, etc.).

ITERS #16 Active Physical Play

3.1 = NO if a child is restrained in a seat or restrictive device for more than 15 minutes (except WHILE eating).

Crib Spacing

From Updated Notes for Clarification July 2011: To recieve full credit, cribs/cots must be 36" apart even if both have solid ends facing each other. 1.1=YES if more than 50% are less than 36" apart, or ANY are less than 18" apart; 3.2=NO if two are less than 36" apart even with solid ends.

Use of Sanitizers (Hand and Surface)

Updated ERS Notes from July 2011: Handsanitizers are accpetable for use only when there is NO VISIBLE DIRT on hands; It must be used EXACTLY as described on the manufacturer's label; NEVER used on children UNDER 24 months; Do not use Antibacterial soap. Handwashing means 20 seconds of rubbing before rinsing off.

EPA approved sanitizers may be used on eating surfaces EXACTLY as described on the manufacturer's label; EPA approved disinfectant instead of bleach-water may be used on diapering surfaces EXACTLY as described on the manufacturer's label.

Please keep in mind that each of these newly approved items are a lot more expensive than a daily solution of bleach-water and regular liquid soap. And the assessors will have to see the original bottles with labels.

BAEYC Meeting August 11

I know that many Family Central staff are BAEYC members. We would love to get your input during our meetings. We will also have openings on the new Board, with elections this November: Vice President, Secretary, President Elect, and 3 Members At Large. And our committees are always eager for volunteers!