In In The News

With Pre-K for All underway, new wage support for early educators, and growing recognition that childcare is economic infrastructure, Michigan is making meaningful strides to advance early childhood education. But national policy leaders and advocates agree: Structural gaps prevent families, educators, and children from fully experiencing a coordinated, high-quality early childhood system.

Michigan’s recent investment in Pre-K for All marks a major milestone. But the rest of Michigan’s birth-to-five system remains uneven. Anne Kuhnen, Kids Count policy director at the Michigan League for Public Policy, describes the state’s early childhood landscape as “somewhat fragmented,” with progress concentrated in 4-year-old programming.

Read more at Model D.