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State superintendent blasted over missteps in D.C. pre-K initiative

By: Leah Fabel
Examiner Staff Writer
November 13, 2009

A District law passed more than a year ago to provide prekindergarten for all of the city’s 3- and 4-year olds has fallen flat, according to testimony Friday before the D.C. Council.


“This [law] has little to nothing to show for it,” said council Chairman Vincent Gray, complaining of a lack of communication and progress from the Office of the State Superintendent of Education.


A facility designed for about 60 infants and toddlers has stood vacant since its opening in 2006, said Frances Rollins, chief operating officer of the Southeast Children’s Fund Inc., which operates child care centers in Ward 8.


The facility, housed in a city office building at the former St. Elizabeths Hospital Center, “would be filled with 60 children if it were open,” Rollins said, explaining that her organization has a waiting list nearly 100 long.


Gray questioned the whereabouts of the nearly $22 million directed at the prekindergarten legislation since summer 2008. The money was to be used for the creation of learning standards, space for about 2,000 more young students, and opportunities for professional development for existing facilities.


“It is our understanding that since this legislation was passed, not a single new pre-K slot has opened in the community-based sector,” Gray said, distinguishing between community centers, like Southeast Children’s, and public school-based centers.


Some charter schools have opened prekindergarten classrooms, but charter advocates testified that there has been little communication from the superintendent’s office about sharing best practices.


That leads to a lack of readily available high-quality care throughout the city, said Joey Weedon, deputy national director of America’s Edge, a nonprofit connecting business leaders with efforts to improve public education.


The superintendent’s office “does not provide any insight into the numbers of families who leave the city due to the undesirability of the slots,” Weedon said, adding that their departure for the promise of suburbia “adversely affects our economic base.”


Representatives from Northeast’s Trinity Washington University and the University of the District of Columbia testified in hopes of partnering with the city to provide early-education teachers, but said they had received no outreach from the superintendent’s office.


D.C. State Superintendent Kerri Briggs laid out progress made during her 8 months on the job, including the establishment of early-learning standards, the awarding of nearly 30 grants, and continued efforts to bring together interested parties.


“There’s no point in having people feel excluded from this,” Briggs said.


lfabel@dcexaminer.com



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All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Five To Go

Nov 15, 2009

Where's the Beef?
Here we go again, missing millions, and know one knows where the money is. The State (DC is not a state) superintendent can not answer a question. Same pattern as our Mayor Fenty.

 

Sick of the Foolishness

Nov 15, 2009

How convenient that Briggs gets blasted just in time to divert attention from the fact that Noah Wepman was fired while the chancellor remains in place. How many people are going to continue to cover for her and her boss the mayor?

 

Nov 15, 2009

It seems to be a normal thing for Briggs to be blasted. She can't justify where a lot of money has gone. Pre-K as well as the millions wasted on the new data system. Gist, we miss you!!!!!!

 

Diogenes

Nov 15, 2009

Just another example of how the U.S. educational system, dominated by teachers unions and incompetent administrators, siphon off millions and millions of dollars for useless fluff, while FAILING to educate the children.

 

Ooopsie Daisy!!!

Nov 16, 2009

Maybe they need Noah Wepman...to find out where the funds are? How ironic a program that would benefit an abundance of african-american children...just seemed to vanish off the radar. How is that...? When the pre-k was being pushed extremely hard by Janey's regime prior to the state superintendent's role all of sudden it is a no-never mind option.

This is the platform a political candidate needs to take...since we are not a state...and the role of a state superintendent actually does what for whom...? At this point siphoning off monies for children is not worthy of the position.

 

highquality4kids

Nov 17, 2009

It may be of interest to note that part of the funds were no doubt used to open the four new pre-k programs in DCPS. Three of the progams are located in public schools in Ward 3, the least diverse and the highest income ward in the city and the remaining program was opened in the public school the mayor's children attend.

 


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