Full-day kindergarten boosts student achievement for children at all income levels. [i]
What Can Policymakers Do?
Include full-day kindergarten as an explicit and primary component in state P-20 reform initiatives. Washington Learns, established by legislation in 2005 [iii] and co-chaired by the governor, recommends reforms to the state’s entire education system from early childhood through post-secondary education and workforce training, and includes voluntary full-day kindergarten for all students as an explicit strategy.[iv] The Governor of Arizona’s School Readiness Action Plan includes full-day kindergarten as a critical tenet of a high quality early childhood education system.
Establish strong incentives in state school funding formulas for school districts to offer full-day kindergarten. New Mexico offers full-day kindergarten funding that is 20 percent greater than the funding provided for 1st grade. Through legislation in 2000 [vi], the state was the first in the nation to provide for voluntary FDK. Through phased-in enhanced funding over five years, the state targeted districts with the highest rates of low-income students, students whose first language is not English, and high-mobility families.
Implement categorical funding programs that encourage school districts to offer full-day kindergarten. Categorical programs can support phased-in implementation of full-day kindergarten, or as a means to target resources to children with particular risk factors or who live in specific geographic areas. Massachusetts more than doubled full-day kindergarten enrollment between 2000 and 2007 by offering grants to help local districts transition from half- to full-day programs and to improve the quality of existing full-day programs. [vi]
Encourage school districts to use a portion of their federal Title I funds to support full-day kindergarten programs. Schools that have 40 percent or more of their enrolled children who qualify as low-income may use Title I funds to implement “school-wide” initiatives, including full-day kindergarten. Indiana developed concrete written guidance for districts on how to maximize the use of Title I funds, as part of a comprehensive set of policies to expand access to full-day kindergarten