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Ivey announces funding for 41 new Pre-K through 3rd Grade Integrated Approach to Early Learning

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Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey and the Alabama Department of Early Childhood Education announced on Tuesday that 41 new classrooms will be funded through the Pre-K through 3rd Grade Integrated Approach to Early Learning.

“Alabama children have reaped the benefits of our nationally recognized First Class Pre-K program, and our P-3 program works to build upon those gains all the way through the third grade,” Ivey said. “As we head into year three of the P-3 program, I’m proud to be funding 41 additional classrooms. Those early years are vitally important for a student’s future success. By expanding this program even further, we are certainly taking advantage of those valuable years in a child’s learning journey.”

This funding supports an additional 32 kindergarten classrooms, five first-grade classrooms and four second-grade classrooms to take part in the P-3 program, bringing the new statewide total from an original 35 classrooms in the 2017 pilot year to 117 P-3 classrooms this upcoming 2019–2020 school year.

The recipients:

  • Zion Chapel, New Brockton & Kinston in Coffee County – $160,000
  • Wetumpka Elementary in Elmore County – $45,000
  • Skyline, North Sand Mountain & Woodville High in Jackson County – $90,000
  • Lexington High, Central High, Brooks Elementary & Rogers High in Lauderdale County – $105,000
  • Brewbaker Elementary in Montgomery County – $30,000
  • Odenville Elementary & Moody Elementary in St. Clair County – $180,000
  • University of North Alabama Kirby Laboratory in Florence – $30,000
  • University Charter School in Sumter County – $90,000

The goal of the P-3 program, now moving into its third year, is to expand the early learning continuum from First-Class Pre-K to include kindergarten through third grade. The Alabama Department of Early Childhood Education and the Alabama State Department of Education are working together to align instructional practices, assessment and leadership from pre-K to third grade.

The P-3 program works to ensure student success and achievement gap closure by expanding access to the nationally recognized, high-quality First Class Pre-K program model and taking the most successful parts of K-3 initiatives to establish a strong foundation of early learning experiences that promote student achievement and success.

“A high-quality early education provides the foundation for student success in school during the years when children have the greatest growth potential,” said Jeana Ross, the Alabama Department of Early Childhood Education secretary. “We are excited to have these new models of seamless learning continuum from pre-K to third grade that align and integrate a comprehensive approach to student learning.”

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P-3 is funded by the Alabama Department of Early Childhood Education through the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, the Governor’s Strong Start Strong Finish education initiative, and the federal Preschool Development Grant, Birth through Five.

Currently, 1,348 children are impacted by the P-3 program. With the addition of 41 new classrooms to the program, more than 2,100 students will be participating in the Pre-K – 3rd Grade Integrated Approach to Early Learning in the upcoming 2019-2020 school year.

Fourteen Alabama elementary school principals and school system administrators have successfully completed the Alabama Pre-K – 3rd Leadership Academy.

The first collaborative initiative of its kind in the nation, the P-3 Leadership Academy is provided in partnership with Council for Leaders in Alabama Schools and the National Association of Elementary School Principals. This is the only such program in which participants, upon successful completion of the program, receive a national certification credential.

In June 2018, the first-ever such cohort in the country to complete this national pilot program received their Alabama P-3 Leadership Credential, and the third leadership cohort will commence in May 2019.

Alabama has some of the worst public schools in the country. Recent evaluations have rated the state as 50th in math and as low as 46th in reading. On the 2018 ACT, 28 Alabama public high schools did not have a single student who tested as college ready according to ACT. Thirty-two percent of students in the state now have access to pre-K. Alabama’s pre-K program is rated as the best in the country. The governor is expanding pre-K in hopes of improving performance statewide.

The state hopes that by their applying their “knowledge of child development, subject matter content and pedagogical approaches to align educational experiences along the P-3 continuum,” it will lead to schools maximizing that pre-K head start.

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Children who read at a third-grade level by third grade typically do well moving forward in school. Children who can’t read by the third grade typically will struggle in school going forward.

“That research findings from multi-year early education interventions suggest that the components of the P-3 approach can combine to make a positive contribution to young children’s learning, providing the pathways through which more children will achieve success by the end of 3rd grade,” the state claims.

Brandon Moseley is a former reporter at the Alabama Political Reporter.

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