- In surprise move, GOP leaders admit defeat in payroll tax battle
- More than 30,000 Germans turn out against anti-piracy treaty ACTA
- Does Obama blueprint reduce budget deficit fast enough? (+video)
- Pentagon budget: Does it pit active-duty forces against retirees? (+video)
- Deadlock on Syria: Likely crimes against humanity, but no plan of action
Head Start's cloudy future
(Page 2 of 2)
That's not to say anyone is suggesting the current system is perfect.
Ms. Nayowith and many others who support Head Start agree that there would undoubtedly be benefits to better coordinating the federal program with the various state and local early-education programs that now abound.
But their concern is finding a way to do so that preserves the basic structure of Head Start. "Obviously, we're [hesitant] to tamper with success," she says.
Perhaps due to the broad support the program receives, House legislators have already backed off on one of the more controversial proposals in their bill.
In recognition of the fact that 40 states run early education programs of their own, it had been suggested that states would be offered the option to merge Head Start into their programs and govern both through funds received as a block grant.
Most Head Start supporters were horrified and saw the proposal as an early step toward obliterating the program.
"Can you think of a worse time to block-grant anything to the states?" asks Augusta Kappner, president of New York's Bank Street College of Education. Given current state-budget shortfalls, she says, "It would be very, very easy for states to cut back not only on Head Start but also on their own early education programs."
In the face of sharp criticism, House Republicans rewrote the bill to allow no more than eight states to take over Head Start on a trial basis.
It's a move that eases - but doesn't necessarily erase - concerns in the Head Start camp. "It slows down the process," says Feingold, but she worries that the goal - merging Head Start into state programs and allowing it to lose its special character - remains the same.
One of the most valued components of Head Start is its degree of parental involvement, says Edward Zigler, director of Yale University's Center in Child Development and Social Policy and one of the original architects of the program.
Each Head Start center is governed by a policy council, of which at least half the participants are parents. That's in contrast to the Title I educational programs run through block grants to the states, Dr. Zigler says. "They've never gotten good parental involvement," he says. When it comes to such programs, "the states do not have a good track record."
Further adding to the furor over the Bush administration's recommendations on Head Start was a May 8 letter from a Health and Human Services official to all Head Start centers warning the centers against attempting to stir up resistance to the proposed changes.
The letter suggests possible criminal or civil penalties if those involved tried to lobby against the bill. The National Head Start Association announced last week that it is filing suit in a federal district court against the Bush administration for violating its freedom of speech.
It's part of what Feingold calls a "crass" element to the way the Bush administration has sought to remake Head Start.
Yet some of those who seek to reform the program say workers like Feingold see a threat where none actually exists.
"There's no reason why you can't focus on health, social development, and school readiness at the same time, and some Head Start centers are already doing that," Ms. Kafer says. "The need is for standards that make everybody get in line."
But Ziegler says the word "standards" is most likely to apply exclusively to academic standards. He is dismayed to hear some policymakers say that the goal of Head Start should be to bring low-income children up to the same literacy level as middle-class children by kindergarten - an aim he considers unrealistic.
"You've got to close the gap as much as you can," he says.
But one year of Head Start, many argue, cannot be expected to give a low income child the same vocabulary soaked up by children from more privileged backgrounds, who typically benefit from wider exposure and richer experiences.
But there's one thing Zigler says he's learned over years of working with politicians, and it makes him nervous with respect to the future of Head Start. "The easiest way to destroy a program," he says, "is to give it an unrealistic goal and then say, 'Look, it's not meeting that goal.' "
Page:
1 | 2



