Universal pre-K: France is about 180 years ahead of America on preschool education
Universal pre-K is a long tradition in France, and one that American parents might envy.
I started the New Year in Paris with a mission: to enroll my daughter in école maternelle,
France’s universal preschool program. This required a visit to our
local city hall. As I walked across the park that sits between it and my
apartment, I felt a little emotional—Sophia had just turned 2 in
November, and now in just a few months she’d be headed off to school? It
didn’t seem possible.
But I had no second thoughts about sending her to maternelle in the fall. Though school isn’t mandatory in France until age 6, all 3-year-olds are guaranteed a place in maternelle,
and over 95 percent of French 3-to-5-year-olds attend. It’s the one
part of France’s educational system that everyone seems to agree is
great. It’s also remarkably cost-efficient: France paid 12.8 billion
euros in 2007 to educate just over 2.5 million preschool age children—a cost of about 5,000 euros per student, or about $6,700. (By way of comparison, the state of New Jersey spends about $13,000 per student in
their own, nonuniversal pre-K program, and Mayor de Blasio proposes
allocating about $10,000 per student in New York City.) In the U.S.,
fewer than three in 10 4-year-olds are enrolled in pre-K programs, and
we rank in the bottom third of developed countries in early childhood
education, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (OECD).
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