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National School Choice Week

State-Run Pre-K Resulted in Worse Educational, Behavioral Outcomes for Kids

Biden wants billions for universal preschool, but a new study finds such programs could be harmful for children.

Peter Suderman | 1.26.2022 3:32 PM

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biden-class-zumaglobaleleven120328 | Ken Cedeno - Pool via CNP/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
(Ken Cedeno - Pool via CNP/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom)

Over and over again, the Biden administration has touted the benefits of "universal" preschool and pre-kindergarten (pre-K) education. These programs, a White House fact sheet declares, are "critical to ensuring that children start kindergarten with the skills and supports that set them up for success in school." Indeed, they are so critical, in this view, that President Joe Biden's stalled spending bill plans to devote what the White House calls a "historic $200 billion investment in America's future" to expanding access to preschool and pre-K schooling. 

Biden himself has advertised the supposed benefits of the new spending, which would roll out through state-based partnerships, on his Twitter feed, with an October post declaring that "studies show that the earlier our children begin to learn in school, the better. That's why we're going to make two years of high-quality preschool available to every child."

On the contrary, a recently published study of a state-run pre-K program in Tennessee found that not only did the program not produce any long-term educational gains, by sixth grade, the children who attended the state's pre-K program were actually performing worse on both educational attainment and behavioral metrics relative to their peers. State-run pre-K appears to have entirely negative effects for children enrolled.

The new study results were based on the findings of a randomized controlled experiment that looked at nearly 3,000 children in Tennessee. Some of these children were randomly selected for the state's pre-K program; others may have attended alternatives, like Head Start or home-based care. The children in both groups were then followed for years, allowing the researchers to track educational attainment and disciplinary issues over time. 

As public policy research goes, this sort of study design—randomized selection into a program plus years of follow-up on the same relatively large group of subjects—is about as high-quality as you're likely to get. Indeed, this is the first randomized controlled study of state-run pre-K, lending extra weight to its findings. And that makes the results all the more devastating. 

Although the program initially produced small gains in educational achievement among students who attended pre-K, relative to their peers who did not, by third grade those gains had been wiped out, and a small decline in student performance began to show. 

By sixth grade, the difference was even starker: Students who had attended pre-K performed worse on standardized tests, had more disciplinary issues, and were more likely to be sent to special education services.

The study's authors have not sugar-coated the results: "At least for poor children, it turns out that something is not better than nothing," Dale Farran, a Vanderbilt University professor who worked on the study, told education news organization the Hechinger Report, in a report on the study's findings.

Farran singled out the damage that state-run pre-K systems are doing to poor children, ostensibly the primary beneficiaries of this sort of program. In addition, Farran tells the Hechinger Report that the study design should rule out unique factors, such as program quality or parental engagement, as the primary drivers of student performance issues. 

No study is perfect. But with a large study group, random assignment, and repeat check-ins over a long period of time, this is about as close as you'll ever be able to come to determining causality in public policy research: This is strong evidence that the long-term student academic performance and behavioral problems were a result of enrollment in state-run pre-K.  

Nor are these study results completely unexpected. As Sam Hammond of the Niskanen Center notes on Twitter, other studies, including one of a comparable early childhood education program in Quebec, have found "lasting negative cognitive and noncognitive impacts from pre-k." This sort of state-run pre-K is bad for children. 

There was, however, one group who appeared to benefit from the program: teachers employed by the program. In the Hechinger Report article, Farran notes that the Tennessee pre-K system offered retirement and health care benefits as well as salaries to match the state's public school teachers, making the program's compensation relatively generous compared to many other state-run pre-K programs. As is far too often the case, especially in education, a state program benefited public employees at the expense of children. Biden's proposed preschool program is not entirely focused on funding this sort of pre-K, but it would almost certainly end up funding more failed, flawed programs like this one. 

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Peter Suderman is features editor at Reason.

National School Choice WeekEducationSchool ChoiceJoe BidenBiden Administration
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  1. Brian   3 years ago

    The Scientism has spoken.

    1. AnneBergan   3 years ago

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    2. buybuydandavis   3 years ago

      Government schools are child abuse.

    3. daveca   3 years ago

      but is it Settled Scientism?

    4. Bluwater   3 years ago

      There was a similar study, ironically done under Obama about Head Start that said the same thing. Children do marginally better up till about 2nd grade and then no difference. I don't recall them getting into the behavioral side of things.

      But this has nothing to do with educating children or giving them a jump start. Your 4-year-old should be at home playing and bonding with parents, not being a ward of the state. Instead, this is about babysitting, bringing more union teachers into the fold, and building more dependencies on the state, both for parents and the child.

      1. daveca   3 years ago

        ...like another $200 B in debt us good for our future...

        Fuck Biden. Hes a Looney.

      2. m4019597   3 years ago

        You’re close.

        It’s not the programs, but what they represent: enriched learning for parents who don’t have the resources to stay home and raise the kids themselves.

        The reason the kids do worse by age 9 or 10 is that the parents leave the kids alone more, to pick up work shifts.

        Because these programs are a proxy for less wealth, the same results are found in the years following all of them, regardless of who provides them.

        The programs themselves are great. That’s why the kids do so well in the early years. The challenge is that they don’t solve the wealth problem.

        1. Mockamodo   3 years ago

          So you're saying that only the poor single mother kids do worse while all of those rich white elites kids do better, but the study didn't find that. Kids in similar social/financial situations do worse with pre-k and better without it across the board. It's more likely that less time bonding with the parents is the problem. This isn't really about education, education is probably, kind of obviously, the least important issue being considered, it's about buying votes with free child care.

        2. Sevo   3 years ago

          "You’re close..."

          You're not; you're 'telling stories'.

        3. GKHoffman   3 years ago

          Actually, no. The Head Start longitudinal study referenced in an earlier comment had the same results as this one, but wealth was not a factor. The control group was populated by kids who had applied for admission to a Head Start program but didn't get in. The test group was kids who did get in. Head Start is a prime example of a government program that does not work as touted, but is immortal anyway.

  2. OpenBordersLiberal-tarian   3 years ago

    "Biden wants billions for universal preschool, but a new study finds such programs could be harmful for children."

    Harmful for children? Who cares. Children can't vote (yet).

    If this spending will benefit one or more components of the Democratic coalition, that's enough for me to support it.

    #LibertariansForBiden

  3. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

    You'd have to know nothing about anything to think that government-run preK 'education' could be a good thing.

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      Gotta get hold of them as young as possible.

      Those 5 year olds ask too many questions.

      What says " the US is in an economic DEPRESSION more that 20 billion in food aid to schools?

      FJB

    2. Ronald73   3 years ago

      Amen. Too many people in government (and out of government) seem to have a penchant for adopting "solutions" that are worse than the so-called problems they are supposed to solve.

      1. Bluwater   3 years ago

        Well, first you have to invent a problem that people didn't even know they had before you can offer a solution that they can't live without.

    3. buybuydandavis   3 years ago

      "You'd have to know nothing about anything to think that government-run 'education' could be a good thing."

      FTFY

      Government schools are child abuse.

  4. JimboJr   3 years ago

    Govt does a thing at higher cost, with worse results for all

    New story?

    1. Dick Hardwood   3 years ago

      A poorly educated, indoctrinated population is a desirable goal for the democrats. Education, critical thinking. And independent thought are anathema to the progs.

      1. buybuydandavis   3 years ago

        A top goal of public policy is to make the ruling class hereditary.

        1. Dick Hardwood   3 years ago

          Indeed. That’s why they’re forcing garbage about CRT and trannies down our children’s throats 8n government schools. Not at the schools the children of the elite attend. Do people really think that Sasha and Milia Obama we’re learning this soft headed crap? Or were they learning about geopolitics and things like that?

          One goal of the government school curriculum is to ensure that our children do not compete with their children. And the clapping seals in the democrat party like Tony, Liarson, Buttplug, Shitlunches, etc. applaud this. Clinging desperately to the delusion that they will have a seat at the table and not be on the menu, like the rest of us.

  5. HorseConch   3 years ago

    Short of living on the streets, it is hard to imagine the government doing a better job at any aspect of parenting than anyone with a pulse. That doesn't discount the fact that at least 1/3+ of adults should never have, or should never have had kids.

    1. JimboJr   3 years ago

      It appears those kids might have been better off living on the streets than attending govt pre-K

  6. nobody 2   3 years ago

    Worse for who? Making children less intelligent seems like a win for the government. Do these programs also make their victims more likely to mindlessly obey orders, by any chance?

    1. JimboJr   3 years ago

      They are probably more likely to blindly follow, not critically think for themselves, and not question "official guidance" or "the science".

      So in other words, perfect future reliably-democrat voting statists.

      So in a way, I guess the govt actually did succeed this time.

    2. daveca   3 years ago

      Its not about education.

      Its a free debt funded daycare for parents to work at mick Ds making burger- fish sammiches. Or whatever weird combo they're doing now.

      Its more Welfare.

  7. Dillinger   3 years ago

    "Ugh, you went ahead and had the baby? Well, give it to us at age 3 we'll take care of it."

    1. Ronald73   3 years ago

      You have summed it up with two sentences. That's something government can't do. It would take them a dozen committee meetings, some special commissions, a grant to favored universities, and another 12 years to actually accomplish anything, good or bad.

      1. Bluwater   3 years ago

        Perhaps, but they can start charging you for it today.

  8. Sopater   3 years ago

    You mean separating young children from their parents is detrimental? Even when they are in the hands of the state?

    Government school is no place for a child.

  9. ckfred   3 years ago

    Any education is only effective, if there are a couple of pushy parents, making sure that what is taught sticks, and to filter out what may be stupid.

  10. Tripoli   3 years ago

    I think it really depends on the parents setting the foundational values for the child. I have been an education resource for NASA and subbed at schools over the years. Behavior is markedly different in large city schools to suburb school systems.
    I have seen in the past few years, large city schools to be filled in elementary school grades with a mix of 30% of literally feral kids. No English skills, no etiquette, literally no control of the child, 100% rebellious. 40% of kids who are there and may or may not have interest in what is being taught. 30% of good kids that want to learn but are held back but the kids who are misbehaving and taking critical time from the classroom.
    Furthermore, systems with a "Higher education curriculum", that switches subjects from hour to hour, makes it impossible to teach as by the time you get the class settled and take care of the kids fighting the agenda, the next "hourly" period subject needs to be taught.
    Suburb and private schools tend to pay less as the teachers are dealing with more well behaved children. Most teachers are willing to take the pay cut to get away from the problem children in large city school systems.

    1. Illocust   3 years ago

      Randomized selection of students addressed the first part of your post. Randomization controlled for quality of students and background, so only the benefits of public pre-k was measured.

      1. Sevo   3 years ago

        ^+1.
        That's exactly the *reason* for randomization

    2. Overt   3 years ago

      "the next "hourly" period subject needs to be taught."

      I'm not a big fan of a lot of changing traditional education practices that masquerade as progress these days, but my kids' schools have switched to block education. Instead of doing all classes an hour a day, they do half the classes at 2 hours Tues and Thurs, and the other half Weds and Fri, and then Monday is reserved for "tutorial" sessions where kids can get extended help from whichever class(es) are giving them problems.

      It is much better than the whiplash you had in my high schools.

    3. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

      "...literally feral kids."

      I have been bitten while subbing. Lower Elementary grades, but old enough to have known better.

      Parental disengagement has horrific results, and sociopathy starts with strollers isolating kids at an early age. Television and public schools finish the job.

      1. daveca   3 years ago

        ..then they vote Biden.

  11. Illocust   3 years ago

    It would be interesting to see how far this detriment applies. Would children who do not attend public kindergarten see similar improvements in long term education?

    1. m4019597   3 years ago

      It’s not the education or the intervention that causes the detriment. It’s the sample group that avails itself of the free programs, namely low income and financially challenged parents.

      Less money, mo problems.

      1. markm23   3 years ago

        Supposedly the study controlled for income, etc. If I understand correctly, it compares kids who got into the program at random to others from the same background who didn't. In the long run, the kids who went through the preschool program did worse from similar kids who were left with their parents or baby sitters. This makes me wonder whether non-government non-school child care has the same detrimental effect.

        OTOH, the problem may not be in the pre-school programs, but in the public schools that follow. Kids in preschool programs get ahead of other kids of the same intelligence and background, then they are dumped into public schools run under the principle of no child gets ahead. It should be obvious why the kids eventually fall back to the same educational attainments as their peers without preschool in this environment, but according to this study, they do even worse, and behave worse. Perhaps that's because they've learned to view the school as an _obstacle_ to their progress. So they act up more and pay less attention.

  12. SteelyEyed   3 years ago

    It would have been interesting to also track students at non-state-run PreK, like private and religious schools. I do respect some Catholic schools' programs--not the Protestant ones though, they are terrible. And I'm Protestant.

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      youre not Protestant enough.

      You have ANY respect for a Child Molesting thieveng church?

      1. Steve-O   3 years ago

        I think we have a fallacy here. The Catholic clergy is rotten to the core. But it does not follow that the Catholic Church delivers a poor education. The priests and bishops who set the curriculum at the diocesan level are very well-educated, and in this day and age, they have minimal involvement in actual delivery of instruction, which is done almost exclusively by lay women. Catholic education is also highly-resistant to wokeism.

        Julius Caesar was a genocidal asshole. Doesn’t mean he failed to prepare Octavian for his job.

  13. jack murphy   3 years ago

    "By sixth grade, the difference was even starker: Students who had attended pre-K performed worse on standardized tests, had more disciplinary issues, and were more likely to be sent to special education services."

    SURPRISE! welfare kids, from welfare moms, with backed out dad's, going to welfare "preschool" are turning out exactly like we might predict. single parent homes are the training grounds for failed kids. all the "intervention" in the world will not change that until it is a male figure demonstrating responsible behavior and also a responsible female that does not rely on welfare. until and unless children see proper role models striving and being upright there will be no change

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      FYCKINGBINGO!!!!!!!!!

      Whos yo Daddy?
      I DUNNO!

      Theres the root problem.

      Sperm receptacle for a mother, no daddy. Mom has to work 2 jobs and cant afford daycare.

      $15 an hour at Booger King isnt nearly enough.

      THATS what this is about.

    2. Duelles   3 years ago

      Ditto that f…ing bingo comment

  14. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    The outcomes don't matter. Your children don't belong to you. That's what matters.

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      In Abortionist lingo, its " the ones that got away."

  15. voluntaryist   3 years ago

    Pre-school can be harmful? Yes, and public school. That was the intent from its beginnings, e.g., to train children to be "good citizens", i.e., obedient, reverent, loyal, ready for exploitation.
    For example, the "Pledge of Allegiance" is overt brain-washing. But it's required by the "law & order" true-believers who will use the law to enforce it, as if all debate ends with "the law is the law". That is the lie they tell themselves. Want proof? The SCOTUS ruled in 1945 the "Pledge" can't be forced, but suddenly, that ruling can be ignored ? Why? It's inconvenient. The "law" is a tool used to control when reason has been abandoned.

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      "the "Pledge of Allegiance" is overt brain-washing. "

      Why?

      Theres no support for your basic statement.

      Im not disagreeing, just want to know why?

      1. Steve-O   3 years ago

        You have a bunch of children stand up every day and take a loyalty oath they don’t even understand. I find it creepy as fuck.

        Every morning in grade school, I recited it word-for-word with the rest of the impressionable urchins. In high school, I still recited the parts I agreed with but refused to say the word “indivisible.” I want to keep my options open.

  16. SimonP   3 years ago

    The evidence here suggests, then, that the money for pre-K would be better spent providing cash subsidies to parents of young children, so that they can care for those children at home or take advantage of other family- or faith-based alternatives to state-sponsored pre-K.

    Glad we could clear that up!

    1. Sevo   3 years ago

      Or perhaps we simply let people to keep their money.

      1. SimonP   3 years ago

        I like how you say that like you're a net tax payee.

        1. Sevo   3 years ago

          I like how you're so fucking stupid as to assume otherwise, steaming pile of lefty shit.

      2. Steve-O   3 years ago

        That’s just crazy talk.

  17. John Burchardt   3 years ago

    Not that any of the Posters before me bothered to look at the study, There was nothing regarding the family's social problems. Makes one wonder why the results for poor children didn't start showing a detriment until after 3rd grade. Where's the info regarding K-2?

    For those who don't realize the program's purpose, it's to get both parents working. I wonder how many people would be willing to pay mother's to stay home with their kids?

    1. iowatwo   3 years ago

      pay mother's to stay home with their kids?

      The math rarely works for the lower earning spouse to justify childcare.

    2. Sevo   3 years ago

      "...I wonder how many people would be willing to pay mother's to stay home with their kids?"

      I wonder why people don't seem to realize it costs money to HAVE kids.

      1. The Team Struggling   3 years ago

        They are basically free to have, but it costs a fortune to raise one.

        1. rbike   3 years ago

          Mine are worth every penny. Wish I had more.

  18. Salted Nuts   3 years ago

    "State-Run Pre-K Resulted in Worse Educational, Behavioral Outcomes for Kids"

    State-run anything results in worse outcomes for everyonr but the state. This is why no Communism.

  19. iowatwo   3 years ago

    The government has 60? years of Head Start data. Never moves the needle on student performance.

    Want to improve society? One parent needs to be home until the kids get into 5th? grade.
    That assumes there are two parents, so we need to put the breaks on divorce. Or make the split monetarily painful for both sides.

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      These programs in my experience at least to be for the MR/DD kids.

      That seems to run 40-80 % now...

  20. Titus PUllo   3 years ago

    Head start has been a massive failure. Pre K isn't needed. What is needed is to allow ONE parent to stay home until the child is 7 or 8 years old like my mom did. We can't do this because wages have not risen with inflation due to our stupid monetary/fiscal policies (deficit spending and need to offshore our dollars to China to limit inflation). The problem is govt. Get rid of all these subsidizes and cut the federal govt 80% or more. Shut down the Fed and let one parent stay home. So many problems stem from fighting the natural state. Child obesity is related to two parents working full time and relying on fast food for dinner. As for public schools...move their ownership from school boards to the local elected town or village mayor who appoints a professional from the private sector to run the schools.

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      how DARE you advocate the Nuclear Family !!!

      Thats Ray- ciss or something.

      Besides, nuclear is dangerous!

      FJB

  21. daveca   3 years ago

    THIS VIDEO explains it all.

    Dont worry about " NSFW" bc 'these folk don' do dat.'

    " I gotta enough ta git TURNT UP!"

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=xLTTX35LNJo

  22. Unforgettably Forgettable   3 years ago

    This would never be mandatory.......right?........right?

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      One didnt need to join the Hitler Youth.
      Nor the military.

      One could just starve.

      Heil Biden!

      ( up- thrust arm, fist, extended middle finger)

  23. Unforgettably Forgettable   3 years ago

    Isn't there already pre kindergarten education? It's called parenting.
    (although my mom subcontracted some to Captain Kangaroo.)

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      Quality TV.

      Nowadays its Xusha.

      1,000 Internet points to anyone who knows who/ what that was, and a 10x multiplier if you gagged while watching it.

  24. Unforgettably Forgettable   3 years ago

    But....but.... it's FREE!

    1. daveca   3 years ago

      Sos The Clapp.

  25. I'm Just Say'n   3 years ago

    i'm taking the opinion that this article does represent reality in most of the first world, (and parts of the second that can afford it), where pre-K education has proved itself worthwhile. A single study, from one low income state with a low educational matriculation rate is not exactly an exemplar of through research for this mater. Mr. Peter Suderman disrespects us, his readers, by not even footnoting the "source". Rote bashing of humanistic social enterprises is getting mechanical without the tiresome splurging of intellectual capital.
    Shame of the editors of Reason.

    1. Titus PUllo   3 years ago

      Sure say like Norway or China or someplace that isn't "multicultural"..student underperformance is not because of lack of money in the public schools but culture, culture, culture and everyone knows that.

      Bernie S

    2. GKHoffman   3 years ago

      I'd like to see which studies proved pre-K education is worthwhile in most of the first world. Since all children are enrolled in pre-K, it would be impossible to find a control group. If you know of any such studies, tell us.

  26. Chumby   3 years ago

    This has become a dog bites man story.

  27. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    The only three words any small child needs to hear from their mother is "mama be back!"

    Everything else is the state.

  28. Lord of Strazele   3 years ago

    The manner in which you teach children matters. The idea of not teaching them is dumb.

    1. The Team Struggling   3 years ago

      Where would we all be without insightful platitudes like these driving the conversation? Thrilling acumen.

    2. JimboJr   3 years ago

      well apparently "not teaching them" came in with better results than your govt top men actively teaching them. Seems that the market (private) or nothing came out on top. An embarrassment for your kind, but we all knew that would be happening anyways. Who would have thought the activists pushing CRT would do worse than people teaching kids how to actually add or subtract appropriately?

      So kindly get fucked next time you come around defending govt programs and how fantastic they are.

  29. Roberta   3 years ago

    What could it be about early schooling that would produce such a pattern of results: short term improvement, followed by long term disimprovement? Any explanation I can think of for one would be inconsistent with the other.

  30. 7cac669   3 years ago

    True story: When I started kindergarten in 1951 age 5 I had no knowledge of the alphabet.

    By second grade I was reading ahead of the class.

    I know a lady who did not start his son in kindergarten until age 6 (she did not feel his maturity and social skills were up to his peers).

    He is now 39, a college graduate and a high earner.

    Regimented education at too early an age potentially stunts normal independent development.
    Dennis Trigubetz
    Los Angeles

  31. John Gall   3 years ago

    State run pre-k will have all the wqarmth of a Government run orphange, with the care provided at a State run nursing home.

  32. CaptainJack   3 years ago

    It is a bad study, mostly because parents who would opt in for state run pre-k are mostly absentee or overwhelmed parents that need a baby sitter. Meanwhile those who opt out have better options for rearing and educating their children.

  33. Truthteller1   3 years ago

    I'm sure state media will be all over this science.

  34. bocsci2018   3 years ago

    SNIPER(ABL)-044
    https://ptc.bocsci.com/product/sniper-abl-044-291947.html SNIPER(ABL)-044, conjugating HG-7-85-01 (ABL inhibitor) to Bestatin (IAP ligand) with a linker, induces the reduction of BCR-ABL protein with a DC50 of 10 μM[1].

  35. NonLawyerDan   3 years ago

    A bit late here, but I just wanted to note something very impressive about whoever wrote the subtitle to the article. "Biden wants billions for universal preschool, but a new study finds such programs could be harmful for children." Given that Reason is not a fan of universal preschool, the could easily have written, "..new study finds such programs harmful for children," which drops "could be". That sounds more damning, and is a logically defendable description; but adding "could be" makes the description technically correct. Shocking restraint. Well done.

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