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‘Closer to Home’ and ‘A Path to Equity’

A child draws with a crayon on a surface covered in art supplies and paper
Exploring the impact of more equitable access to pre-k on student outcomes
  • Client
    Institute of Education Sciences
  • Dates
    2018 - 2021

School-based pre-k has expanded substantially across the country in recent years, but little evidence exists on the extent to which the students who are most likely to benefit from pre-k actually enroll in school-based programs, thus whether these expansion efforts are related to the reduction of early achievement gaps. In 2013, Chicago Public Schools (CPS) overhauled the way it delivered school-based pre-k in the hope of improving enrollment among “high priority” students, including students of color, low-income students, and non-English speakers. As part of its overhaul, CPS re-allocated pre-k classrooms, centralized the enrollment process, and increased the number of full-day options in neighborhoods where historically underserved students live.

NORC at the University of Chicago, with funding from the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) at the U.S. Department of Education and in partnership with Start Early and the University of Chicago Consortium on School Research, studied the effects of CPS pre-k efforts. Working with secondary data, NORC researchers analyzed access to and enrollment in school-based pre-k before and after CPS enacted its policy changes. They released their findings in a 2020 report called “Closer to Home.” A follow-up study called “A Path to Equity” examined the associations between those policy changes and students’ elementary school outcomes.

The “Closer to Home” study found that after CPS policy changes, high-priority student groups were up to three times more likely to enroll in full-day pre-k. Pre-policy, the students most likely to enroll in CPS’s small number of full-day pre-k options (many of which required families to pay tuition) were white students, students living in the highest-income neighborhoods, and students living in mostly white neighborhoods. Post-policy, full-day pre-k opportunities expanded, and the students most likely to enroll in full-day pre-k were Black students, students living in the lowest-income neighborhoods, and students living in mostly Black neighborhoods.

The “Path to Equity” study found that increased access to and enrollment in full-day, school-based pre-k were related to higher kindergarten entry skills and better academic outcomes in second grade, particularly for high-priority students. Average second-grade math and reading test scores and academic grades increased the most for some high-priority student groups, including Black students, students in the lowest-income group, and students living in mostly Black neighborhoods.

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