As any parent or educator can attest, the pandemic has touched nearly all aspects of preschool. It has reshaped policies and practices, altered the delivery and content of professional development, and shaken families’ confidence about sending their kids to school.
Many of these changes, such as waived or relaxed teacher requirements, are expected to be temporary. Others may stick around for some time. And all of them, taken together, are expected to have long-term implications on the quality of preschool programs, the number of seats available in those programs and the kindergarten readiness of children who learned remotely or experienced frequent school closures.
It has been clear for many months now that the pandemic would have a profound impact on preschool programs and preschoolers’ experiences. But how much, and at what cost, has largely been up in the air. Hoping to demystify that impact, and to get a comprehensive look at how programs and policies were reshaped over the last year, the National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER) at Rutgers University has produced a special report on the topic. The report, a supplement to its annual State of Preschool Yearbook, reviews state-by-state data on COVID-19 responses, from forced closures and remote learning to enrollment, funding and workforce ramifications.
Specifically, the report examines state-funded preschool programs serving 3- and 4-year-olds. The data in the Yearbook was self-reported by state education officials and reviewed for consistency by NIEER.
First, a look at the staggering number of programs affected. In mid-March of 2020, when the COVID-19 outbreak began in the U.S., 22 states required all preschool programs to close, though most had cleared programs to reopen—with a mix of in-person and remote learning options—by the beginning of the 2020-21 school year. Another 15 states required only some programs—typically those embedded in a K-12 public school—to close, while others were allowed to remain open (as was the case in states such as Iowa and Kansas.)