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Preschool Leads To Better Jobs And Fewer Arrests, New Study Says

Preschool

LINDSEY TANNER   06/ 9/11 04:30 PM ET   AP

CHICAGO — Preschool has surprisingly enduring benefits lasting well into adulthood, according to one of the biggest, longest follow-up studies of its kind.

Better jobs, less drug abuse and fewer arrests are among advantages found in the study that tracked more than 1,000 low-income, mostly black Chicago kids for up to 25 years.

Michael Washington was one of them. Now a 31-year-old heating and air conditioning contractor, Washington attended a year of preschool at Chicago's intensive Child-Parent Center Education Program when he was 4.

The ongoing publicly funded program focuses on language development, scholastic skills and building self-confidence. It involves one or two years of half-day preschool, and up to four additional years of educational and family services in grade school. Preschool teachers have college degrees and are certified in early childhood education, and parents are encouraged to be involved in the classes.

Washington lived in an impoverished West Side community and has strong memories of preschool field trips to the library, zoo and planetarium where he learned to love science. He says he'll never forget the strong influence of his preschool teachers.

"You expect your mom and dad to care for you. But when a stranger, who has no ties to you whatsoever, takes the time to invest in you, takes the time to listen, that makes you open your eyes bigger," said Washington, now living in Blue Island, Ill. "It was real cool."

Washington got good grades in elementary and high school, and attended two years of college at Chicago State University. Unlike other kids he knew from the neighborhood who didn't attend preschool, he says he never tried drugs and was never arrested.

The study tracked nearly 900 children into adulthood who attended the program in the early 1980s, and compared them to almost 500 low-income Chicago youngsters, most of whom didn't attend preschool.

The results were published Thursday in the online version of the journal Science. They bolster findings from similar, smaller studies and show that high-quality preschool "gives you your biggest bang for the buck," said Dr. Pamela High, chair of an American Academy of Pediatrics committee that deals with early childhood issues. She was not involved in the study.

Though many preschool kids also got extra services in grade school, including intensive reading instruction, the researchers found the most enduring effects, particularly for non-academic success, were due to one or two years of preschool. The authors theorize that those intensive early childhood experiences built intellectual skills, social adjustment and motivation that helped children better navigate their high-risk environments.

To be sure, the challenges facing the children in both groups were still insurmountable to many. As adults, the average annual income for those who went to preschool is less than $12,000 and almost half of them had been arrested as adults. As dismal as those outcomes, the numbers were still better than for the group that didn't attend preschool. And experts not involved in the study called the results impressive.

"To still show really any advantage for such a long period of time is remarkable and noteworthy," said Kyle Snow, director of the National Association for the Education of Young Children's applied research center.

The study's lead researcher, Arthur Reynolds of the University of Minnesota, said the differences between the groups are meaningful and translate to big savings to society for kids who attended preschool.

The average cost per child for 18 months of preschool in 2011 is $9,000, but Reynolds' cost-benefit analysis suggests that leads to at least $90,000 in benefits per child in terms of increased earnings, tax revenue, less criminal behavior, reduced mental health costs and other measures, he said.

"No other social program for children and youth has been shown to have that level of return on investment," he said.

Among the study results:

_80 percent of the preschool group finished high school versus 75 percent of the others;

_Nearly 15 percent of the preschool group attended a four-year college, versus 11 percent of the others;

_28 percent of the preschool group had skilled jobs requiring post-high school training versus 21 percent of the others;

_Average annual adult income for the preschool group was about $11,600 versus $10,800 for the others. The low average incomes include zero earnings for those in prison and close to that for adults who were still in college or studying elsewhere.

_14 percent of the preschool group had abused drugs in adulthood versus 19 percent of the others;

_48 percent of the preschool group had been arrested in adulthood and 15 percent had been incarcerated, versus 54 percent of the others arrested and 21 percent incarcerated.

The results are based on public records, administrative data and interviews with study participants.

A spokeswoman for Chicago's public schools noted that newly elected Mayor Rahm Emanuel committed during his campaign to ensuring that the city's highest-risk kids have access to early childhood programs.

And despite cuts to state early childhood funding, public preschool and kindergarten programs in Chicago have not been slashed for next year, she said.

___

Online:

Science: http://www.scienceexpress.org

___

AP Medical Writer Lindsey Tanner can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/LindseyTanner

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CHICAGO — Preschool has surprisingly enduring benefits lasting well into adulthood, according to one of the biggest, longest follow-up studies of its kind. Better jobs, less drug abuse and fewe...
CHICAGO — Preschool has surprisingly enduring benefits lasting well into adulthood, according to one of the biggest, longest follow-up studies of its kind. Better jobs, less drug abuse and fewe...
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03:44 PM on 06/15/2011
"No other social program for children and youth has been shown to have that level of return on investment"

really? considering this is obviously poverty related; 'low-income, mostly black' / 'the average annual income for those who went to preschool is less than $12,000', how about a program to alleviate poverty?

there is a direct correlation between poverty and all manner of social pathology. preschool should be an afterthought.
http://nasspblogs.org/principaldifference/2010/12/pisa_its_poverty_not_stupid_1.html
07:36 PM on 06/15/2011
I've read a few stories on this report and there were many impacts reported such as crime prevention, insurance coverage, education, lots of economic outcomes (income and others). When ones adds it all up, the benefit to society was very large. Focusing on just income is not what the story was about. It is the difference in income that matters. The stories also noted those in college and in prison were included and so that explains the amounts reported.

Poverty is one of many predictors of education and later success. Preschool, school quality, achievement, and a host of others.
10:54 PM on 06/15/2011
it seems like you're agreeing with me, but i'm a little confused by what you wrote. i'm not sure exactly what you're referring to, but i'll say this: poverty reduction alleviates a host of social pathologies. the benefit to society is not nearly as great as it could be, and these duplicitous politicians are missing the point. there is an obvious correlation from the data that they provide that if you are poor, regardless if you go to preschool or not, you will most likely remain poor. the difference in income is negligible. that $90k they refer to is also not a net gain in income for these individuals. it's spread out through taxes and potential savings on potential expenditures.
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10:11 AM on 06/14/2011
I really like the HIPPY model of preschool because it involves parents and is community based. Not only does it help prepare children for school, it strengthens families and encourages parents to get further education and training so they can get better jobs to provide for their families.

This program was begun in Israel and brought to America many years ago. Hillary Clinton is one person who helped start it here.

http://www.hippyusa.org/the_hippy_model.php
04:04 PM on 06/14/2011
This is a valuable model but its effects are much smaller than those of high quality programs like the Child-Parent Centers. I thought there was a substantial parent component to this program plus school transition services.
10:57 PM on 06/12/2011
First let me say that preschool is great, everyone should attend. But there is a major issue with this study. Namely, that the kids who attend preschool are precisely the same kids whose parents play an active role in their social and academic development. So its not so much preschool being the causative factor as purported by the study, its the overall home environment which facilitated a kid's entry into preschool.
04:11 PM on 06/14/2011
Reports I read indicated that the groups compared were equivalent and that the kids not in program got other services. This would make results more conservative than if the group was compared to those with no other services. Isn't this study in the journal Science? It seems the best approach was used and the differences are due to the program.
09:03 PM on 06/12/2011
Interesting.

Sounds like it's no silver bullet, but at least a part of the solution.
11:44 AM on 06/12/2011
I don't believe this study.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SirenForSanity
Hi De Hi Hi De Ho Times
12:53 PM on 06/12/2011
Because it doesn't conform to your apparent bigotry expressed in your earlier posts?
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mcmutter
A Groover has to expect a few setbacks .....
06:36 AM on 06/12/2011
everybody knows preschool is a great investment .... for everyone ......
01:27 PM on 06/12/2011
Preschools are a place to brain wash kids. In many places they have to listen to "Obama Radio" for two hours each day. They also have to listen to the writings of Marx and Lenin.
09:04 PM on 06/12/2011
Groucho Marx and John Lennon?
03:41 PM on 06/15/2011
hahaha. you obviously have no idea what you're talking about, and have never read either marx or lenin. i'm not a fan of government run schooling, but this is asinine.
04:13 PM on 06/14/2011
Unfortunately, everyone doesn't know this. And everybody doesn't know the quality that is needed to achieve strong effects.
08:29 PM on 06/11/2011
Great, this is very good news. Preschool helps children, even in what is considered a high risk area. This is a cost-effective use of our tax dollars. Now why are the Republicans trying to destroy public education? Is it to make money for corporations to privatize education and to get rid of public unions?

By the way, I will not respond to tr0lls, especially the racist one who has been posting on the thread.
10:11 PM on 06/11/2011
Facts are racist? THAT is your problem!
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MadMaddie
Saucy strawberry blonde
06:31 PM on 06/11/2011
Oh no... I AM a preschool teacher.
Guess my job is next on the chopping block, because the GOPbaggers
simply can't have poor/middle class kids succeeding and NOT getting arrested.
06:22 PM on 06/11/2011
Someone tell the Republicans.............they are fine with cutting education programs............more power to the anti-intellectuals? Facts and Reality..........not for them.
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inkhosi
03:03 PM on 06/11/2011
Belies the whole "bell curve" notion that blacks simply just can't do it, no matter the enviornment. I think that's just such a convenient excuse for leaving the condition of inner city schools in a shambolic state---"there's no point in fixing them, they just can't learn". This is a consummate example to the contrary.
03:14 PM on 06/11/2011
End the Welfare State and 60% of the black population and 15% of the white population will be forced to be responsible members of society.
Responsible parents raise responsible children. Responsible people do not have children they cannot care for.
The Welfare State has created a culture of irresponsibility. It is a lifestyle.
03:28 PM on 06/11/2011
and what miserable, morally decrepit, white supremacist state created you?
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pollclaire
Sic Semper Tyrannis
05:15 PM on 06/11/2011
What a Kochpuppet. We're looking at empirical data and in response, you start talking about social engineering that's founded in nothing but the opinions of a fringe minority.
11:45 AM on 06/12/2011
In the inner city the parents are the problem, not the schools.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
SirenForSanity
Hi De Hi Hi De Ho Times
12:55 PM on 06/12/2011
In the inner city, poverty is the problem.
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inkhosi
07:20 PM on 06/12/2011
It's convenient little excuses like that which allow us to keep funneling all of the dollars in the rich white school districts while throwing the spare change to the poor black school districts. Really---that's just way too conveinent. Education funding doesn't make a difference? Serious? Okay, cool, write to your school board and ask them to cut out education funding completely, beyond what's needed for pencil's, paper, and textbooks. Cut down the teacher's salaries to where they're worth next-to-nothing, too. And then let's see how we'll they perform.
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josie klapper
Who can I piss-off today?
01:14 PM on 06/11/2011
Pre-school? Heck, Texas is trying to do away with primary and all other schools for disadvantaged kids...
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10:28 AM on 06/11/2011
The statistics are so close as to be nearly meaningless, especially given that there were almost double the number of people in the study who went to pre-school as who didn't -- which right there might make up the tiny difference in the figures. (The average salary is below $12,000? More than half were arrested? And those are the GOOD statistics?)
12:06 PM on 06/11/2011
Please re-read the report. I happened to look at it and it shows that program kids had about a 25-30% lower rate of both felony arrest and incarceration than the control group 25 years after the end of the program. The state cost of incarceration per inmate for one year of prison roughly $60,000. These are very large positive effects. There are five or six other outcomes that showed similar differences in the same study. Show me another social program that produces these results?
09:09 PM on 06/12/2011
4-7 percent doesn't sound like alot, but the pre-school kids CONSISTENTLY outperform the other kids on all these measures.

If the statistics didn't matter, you'd think the non-preschool-kids would outperform on at least one measure, wouldn't you?
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GraniteSkyline
I wish you happiness!
10:22 AM on 06/11/2011
I got a chuckle--okay more of a snicker--from a confession of a woman I know.

She comes from a very prominent family in this area and she is quite the arrogant snob. She openly looked down upon people who sent their kids to preschool and mocked them with comments like "I didn't have children so some stranger could raise them." (Yeah, she's a charmer.) But now that her oldest 2 kids just finished kindergarten and first grade, she admits that they aren't doing as well as kids who went to preschool.

The other day she actually expressed regret and guilt that her misguided ideals prevented her from giving her kids the best start. (Although, I think the thing that is really hurting her is that her kids aren't the valedictorians of Kindergarten and first grade!)
03:05 PM on 06/11/2011
I doubt that you are telling the truth. Nonetheless, women who have children, then outsource their upbringing are the bane of a civilized society.
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GraniteSkyline
I wish you happiness!
05:04 PM on 06/11/2011
Save your pseudo-indignation. Did you even read the article? Its about preschool. There is a huge difference between qualified preschools that teach skills and the warehousing of kids in daycare.

The civilized societies of Europe, Canada, and Japan all have required public preschool while in the US many school districts still only offer half-day kindergarten.

Now wrack your pea-brain and tell us which countries have overall higher test scores--those with or those without preschool.

(My friend is Elizabeth Delaney, lately of Illinois--sorry if that's too common of a name for you, but that's her name. Do you want her cell #?)
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Twincities
Everyday people normal and I'm glad to be.
05:27 PM on 06/11/2011
i have now seen three of your comments in this article. I believe you are a troll and cannot possibly believe the bile that you are spewing. sending your child to be educated by teachers, interact with other children and then come home to a family unit does not make a bane of society. I can tell you were home schooled yourself because you obviously did not get a proper education.
09:14 PM on 06/12/2011
Sounds like her kids are future mpaulys.
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ruthtruth
seeker of truth, willing to listen
10:12 AM on 06/11/2011
If it is good for children, especially those that come from poor backgrounds you can be sure the right will try and take steps to stop it. They are trying to destroy the chance that anyone but the wealthy have a chance.
03:06 PM on 06/11/2011
The best thing for disadvantaged children is for their parent(s) to stop breeding when they cannot take care of them.
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ruthtruth
seeker of truth, willing to listen
03:43 PM on 06/11/2011
Breeding , really you're going there ? Maybe your parents should have stopped breeding before they had YOU. You are an insult to any thinking, feeling human being. Maybe you should have been born back in the 1930's - 1940's and in Germany, as you would have fit right in with the man with the funny mustache .
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Twincities
Everyday people normal and I'm glad to be.
05:29 PM on 06/11/2011
I wish someone would have said that to your parents then we wouldnt have to be reading your hate filled garbage.
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pinkindie
Out of all those people, you got a brain w/ a view
09:54 AM on 06/11/2011
Our daughter took two years of preschool. We found the socialization aspect of those years to be very formative. Learning to interact with and take instruction from authority figures other than one's parents, learning to get along with one's peers respectfully in an educational setting and also being able to transition from one activity to another. Of course the curriculum was also essential; kindergarten isn't what it used to be in the 70s when I attended. My daughter's class hit the ground running and she was reading by herself halfway through kindergarten and doing math problems that I was doing in first and second grade when I was a kid. I think a child entering kindergarten w/out preschool behind their belt is at a disadvantage; unless their parents have been preparing them through homeschooling. But even homeschooling lacks the benefits of socialization.
03:08 PM on 06/11/2011
If you really believe that home schooled children lack social skills then you are speaking from sheer ignorance. Recent studies show that home schooled children actually do better in social situations than their public school counterparts.
You seem to be a follwer, though, and not a leader. Home schoolers are leaders. Thanks for providing mindless sheep!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Twincities
Everyday people normal and I'm glad to be.
05:30 PM on 06/11/2011
lol i told you you were home schooled before i even got to your comments here advocating home schooling. Hope you got into a good college with your mamma signing your diploma. bet you got all gold stars too :)
11:52 AM on 06/12/2011
It's been proven home schooled kids have more mental problems as adults.