When Pre-K Comes to School: Policy, Partnerships, and the Early Childhood Education Workforce

When Pre-K Comes to School traces what happens—for institutions and teachers—when a school district and community ECE centers partner to provide public pre-K. Wilinski examines policy implementation across diverse sites—a private part-day preschool, a corporate childcare center, and a public elementary school. She demonstrates how pre-K partnerships create opportunities but also considerable constraints for the institutions and teachers involved. Though teachers are required to comply with the same policy mandates, their compensation and access to resources varies greatly. This book calls for policies and practices that will work better for teachers, which, in turn, will work better for children. The book’s unique, insider perspective on how policy is actually enacted in schools provides important insight into what communities and policymakers should consider when creating pre-K policies.

Book Features:

  • An in-depth examination of teachers’ work across settings and situated within a changing, broader policy context.
  • Evidence that public pre-K partnerships have serious and sometimes negative consequences for teachers and institutions.
  • A focus on the experience of teachers who are critical to the success of pre-K.
  • Interviews with pre-K teachers and state policymakers.
  • Recommendations for pre-K policy that is more beneficial to teachers, institutions, and families.

“Absolutely essential and mind-shifting reading for those crafting prekindergarten policies and programs.”
—From the Foreword by Sharon Lynn Kagan, Teachers College, Columbia University

"1125506407"
When Pre-K Comes to School: Policy, Partnerships, and the Early Childhood Education Workforce

When Pre-K Comes to School traces what happens—for institutions and teachers—when a school district and community ECE centers partner to provide public pre-K. Wilinski examines policy implementation across diverse sites—a private part-day preschool, a corporate childcare center, and a public elementary school. She demonstrates how pre-K partnerships create opportunities but also considerable constraints for the institutions and teachers involved. Though teachers are required to comply with the same policy mandates, their compensation and access to resources varies greatly. This book calls for policies and practices that will work better for teachers, which, in turn, will work better for children. The book’s unique, insider perspective on how policy is actually enacted in schools provides important insight into what communities and policymakers should consider when creating pre-K policies.

Book Features:

  • An in-depth examination of teachers’ work across settings and situated within a changing, broader policy context.
  • Evidence that public pre-K partnerships have serious and sometimes negative consequences for teachers and institutions.
  • A focus on the experience of teachers who are critical to the success of pre-K.
  • Interviews with pre-K teachers and state policymakers.
  • Recommendations for pre-K policy that is more beneficial to teachers, institutions, and families.

“Absolutely essential and mind-shifting reading for those crafting prekindergarten policies and programs.”
—From the Foreword by Sharon Lynn Kagan, Teachers College, Columbia University

24.99 In Stock
When Pre-K Comes to School: Policy, Partnerships, and the Early Childhood Education Workforce

When Pre-K Comes to School: Policy, Partnerships, and the Early Childhood Education Workforce

by Bethany Wilinski
When Pre-K Comes to School: Policy, Partnerships, and the Early Childhood Education Workforce

When Pre-K Comes to School: Policy, Partnerships, and the Early Childhood Education Workforce

by Bethany Wilinski

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Overview

When Pre-K Comes to School traces what happens—for institutions and teachers—when a school district and community ECE centers partner to provide public pre-K. Wilinski examines policy implementation across diverse sites—a private part-day preschool, a corporate childcare center, and a public elementary school. She demonstrates how pre-K partnerships create opportunities but also considerable constraints for the institutions and teachers involved. Though teachers are required to comply with the same policy mandates, their compensation and access to resources varies greatly. This book calls for policies and practices that will work better for teachers, which, in turn, will work better for children. The book’s unique, insider perspective on how policy is actually enacted in schools provides important insight into what communities and policymakers should consider when creating pre-K policies.

Book Features:

  • An in-depth examination of teachers’ work across settings and situated within a changing, broader policy context.
  • Evidence that public pre-K partnerships have serious and sometimes negative consequences for teachers and institutions.
  • A focus on the experience of teachers who are critical to the success of pre-K.
  • Interviews with pre-K teachers and state policymakers.
  • Recommendations for pre-K policy that is more beneficial to teachers, institutions, and families.

“Absolutely essential and mind-shifting reading for those crafting prekindergarten policies and programs.”
—From the Foreword by Sharon Lynn Kagan, Teachers College, Columbia University


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780807775639
Publisher: Teachers College Press
Publication date: 04/10/2017
Series: Early Childhood Education Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 852 KB

About the Author

Bethany Wilinski is an assistant professor in the Department of Teacher Education at Michigan State University.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

"Absolutely essential and mind-shifting reading for those crafting prekindergarten policies and programs."
—From the Foreword by Sharon Lynn Kagan, Teachers College, Columbia University


“This text is a must read for those interested in expanding preschool through shared community partnerships. By positioning the experiences of three pre-K teachers across different implementation sites within the local and broader histories of preschool reform, Wilinski provides unique insight into the opportunities and challenges that arise in developing such programs.”
Christopher P. Brown, The University of Texas at Austin

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