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Pre-K Now
Fact Sheets
Pre-K Across the Country

The state of pre-kindergarten varies across the country. These facts are a good starting point for understanding what's happening in pre-k right now.

For more detailed data on pre-k access and quality, check out the "State Preschool Yearbook," published annually by the National Institute for Early Education Research.

Availability
  • State-funded pre-k programs currently serve just 22 percent of four year olds and 3 percent of three year olds in the U.S.
  • Nationally, about 70 percent of children in state-funded pre-k are served in a school setting. For- and non-profit childcare centers, Head Start centers, and faith-based providers serve the other 30 percent.
  • Florida, Georgia, and Oklahoma are the only states that currently make pre-k available to all four year olds.
  • The District of Columbia, Illinois, Iowa, Louisiana, New York, and West Virginia have multi-year plans to implement pre-k for all four year olds. (The District of Columbia and Illinois have plans that include three year olds as well.)
  • Twelve states with state-funded pre-k do not offer their programs to three year olds.
  • Twelve states have no state-funded pre-k program at all.

View our state-by-state map on pre-k program access

Funding
  • States' spending on pre-k programs varies widely, from $1,600 per pre-k child in South Carolina to more than $10,000 per child in New Jersey.
  • Nationwide, state spending on each pre-k child averages about $3,600, or less than one-third of the average dollars spent on each public-school student in K-12.
  • Twelve states - Colorado, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Texas, Vermont, West Virginia, and Wisconsin - and the District of Columbia include pre-k as part of their school funding formulas (as of FY2008). This means that at least a portion of pre-k spending is tied to the same funding increases and decreases as K-12 education, though some of these states place limits on the total funding amount available through the formula.
Quality
  • Seventeen states currently meet eight or more of the ten quality-checklist criteria for its pre-k program, according to the National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER).
  • Ten states currently meet five or fewer of NIEER's quality-checklist criteria.
  • Two states - Alabama and North Carolina - currently meet all ten of NIEER's quality benchmarks.

View our state-by-state map on pre-k program quality

Teachers
  • About 73 percent of pre-k teachers in state-funded programs report that they have a bachelor's degree (or higher degree).
  • About 56 percent of pre-k teachers report that they hold a teaching certificate from their state designed to include teaching children younger than five years.
  • Twenty-one states do not require all of their state-funded pre-k teachers to have a four-year college degree. Eight of these states do not require any state pre-k teachers to have a bachelor's degree.
  • The average pre-k teacher earns less than half of what the average elementary school teacher earns. About 70 percent of pre-k teachers report earning a salary below 200% of federal poverty guidelines.
  • Pre-k teachers are, to a great extent, reflective of the children they serve. For instance, 71 percent of classrooms where a majority of the children are African American have pre-k teachers who are also African American, and 46 percent of pre-k classrooms with a majority of Latino children have Latino teachers.
 
Resource Center
Pre-K Advocates
Policymakers
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Educators
Families
Tips & Tasks for State Advisory Councils
While reauthorizing Head Start in 2007, Congress added a new provision requiring every state to create or designate a State Advisory Council to better coordinate early education and care services. Pre-K Now has two new resources designed to help policymakers and advocates navigate the process of setting up Councils and seize the opportunities offered by them.
Meeting the Challenge of Rural Pre-K
Families everywhere struggle to find high-quality pre-k programs for their children, but the problem is even more acute in rural areas. Pre-K Now has come out with recommendations for federal policymakers to help states meet the unique challenges of rural pre-k.
Video: Briefing on America's Pre-K Movement
Pre-K Now held a briefing for congressional staff, cosponsored by Sen. Hillary Clinton and Sen. Kit Bond, on October 1. Hear what a governor, three superintendents, two directors of early childhood programs, and a national teacher of the year think Congress should do to increase families' access to quality, state-funded pre-k.
The movement to establish high-quality pre-k for every child who needs it will be America's statement about its children in the 21st Century.