The Minnesota Legislature has been debating early education for many years. Our leaders have made good preliminary progress, but we still have 40,000 low-income Minnesota children under age 5 who can't afford quality early learning programs, and these are the children who are most likely to fall into Minnesota's worst-in-the-nation achievement gaps. Those kids urgently need help.
This year, Gov. Mark Dayton has proposed adding $175 million per biennium for early education. At that level of investment, Minnesota could make serious progress in preventing, narrowing and closing our achievement gaps. As he has for the past six years, the governor is showing bold leadership on this issue.
The problem is, the recommended part-day universal pre-K (UPK) investment strategy is not aligned with what the research says we need to close achievement gaps.
Research done by economists like Art Rolnick, Rob Grunewald and the Nobel Prize-winning James Heckman finds that we must target our limited resources to the low-income children who currently can't access quality early education, and are most likely to fall into achievement gaps. Research also says that those most at-risk kids need multiple years of up to full-day, full-year early learning programming to be ready for kindergarten and all that follows.
Unfortunately, the well-intentioned part-day UPK model doesn't do those things, while the Early Learning Scholarship model does. UPK may make sense at some time in the future, after all of Minnesota's low-income children under age 5 are being fully served. But in 2017, the most vulnerable children must come first before wealthier families served by UPK.
Dayton helped bring the scholarship model statewide, and this year House Republicans, led by Speaker Kurt Daudt (R-Crown) and Education Finance Committee Chair Jenifer Loon (R-Eden Prairie), have wisely proposed to increase funding for flexible scholarships by $24 million per biennium.
The scholarship investment strategy being championed by Republican House leaders and others, with support from many DFL legislators and the 100-organization MinneMinds coalition of nonprofits, was designed by the nonpartisan Minnesota Early Learning Foundation (MELF) specifically to address achievement gaps, so it is consistent with the research we mentioned earlier. That is, scholarships target resources to low-income children, provide multiple years of exposure to high quality programs, and offer working parents a full-day, full-year option.
So, what if Minnesota struck a bipartisan compromise on early education? What if we took $125 million per biennium — a bit less than what the governor is proposing, and a bit more than what the House proposes — and funded the research-based scholarship model that both Republicans and Dayton have in the past championed?