March 2003 |
Pre-K |
From the NYS Assembly • Sheldon Silver, Speaker Steven Sanders, Chair, Education Committee |
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Pataki’s early education cuts will hurt kids in the classroom and beyond Pre-K works, but the governor’s wrong choices will lead to greater costs Governor Pataki’s budget cuts ignore overwhelming evidence that educating children at an early age pays enormous dividends down the road. The governor’s budget would lock 60,000 children out of pre-K – a wrong choice that will surely come back to haunt us in the very near future. Pataki’s cuts shift the costs of delinquency and crime on to communities Research shows that children who attend pre-K programs have higher reading and math scores and are more likely to enjoy long-term academic success. The benefits of early education extend far beyond the classroom. A recent study by Chicago’s Child-Parent Centers found that kids who attend pre-K are 70 percent less likely to be arrested for a violent crime by age 18. Cutting this vital program will put many of our children on a wrong path and shift the burden to law enforcement, who will be left to deal with the consequences of the governor’s poor choice. Educators and taxpayers would share the burden of ill-prepared students. A recent report by the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University found pre-K could save Florida school districts up to $3 billion by reducing the need for costly special education programs and helping students avoid repeating certain grades. Pre-K is making a real difference for our children, and now is not the time to eliminate this effective program. Now is the time to strengthen the foundation upon which strong communities are built by ensuring that every child in New York can reap the tremendous benefits of a quality pre-K program. Pulling away the ladder to a quality education As it stands, 130,000 of New York’s 4-year olds are going without pre-K, and now the governor wants to make this deficiency worse. That is a wrong choice – one of many in the governor’s record $1.4 billion cut to education – that would leave our children’s academic performance trailing behind the rest of the nation. The Education Commission of the States has found that of the 43 states that offer pre-kindergarten programs, all have seen dramatic improvements in academic achievement. The governor’s choices will hold our children back from a head start on successful academic careers and becoming safe, productive members of the community. Our children are our future, and we must not allow their education to be compromised by the governor’s wrong budget choices The Assembly stands firm in our commitment to our children, their education, and their future. The Assembly’s LADDER program is reducing class sizes, funding universal pre-kindergarten, supporting teacher training, improving the use of technology in the classroom and ensuring proper maintenance of school buildings. As we continue to fight for the proper investment in education, we’ll also fight to amend the state constitution to make pre-kindergarten and kindergarten a permanent part of New York’s education system, guaranteeing all students a strong start on academic achievement and success. |
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