preschool has a whoppingly huge impact on disadvantaged children
[UPDATE:Â I think I was not skeptical enough in this post, and relied on too few sources (see comments for some useful caveats). Â I hope to do some follow up posts eventually and delve into both Tough’s work and other work on early childhood interventions and educational interventions some more.]
Planet Money recently had a story on the radical effectiveness of preschool at changing the lives of poor and at-risk kids, lasting long past preschool. Â A few examples of how kids’ lives improved if they’d attended preschool vs. if they hadn’t:
- teen pregnancy rates were far lower
- arrest rates were far lower in kids
- employment rates and income were substantially higher
- the story also implied that homelessness rates were lower.
An economic analysis cited by Planet Money indicated that making sure kids go to preschool (or presumably otherwise learn “soft skills” early on) is one of the most effective ways you can improve a child’s life, on many surprising dimensions. Â It also seems to be one of the best ways to have broader impacts on society as well, given the large effects on the above issues. Â As a billionaire investor said, investing in preschools is a good way to treat some of the causes of issues rather than just the symptoms.
Has anyone read Paul Tough’s book? Â I’m interested, but not sure whether or not there’s substantially more to it beyond the coverage I’ve already heard.