ED365426 PS021803
Title: Poor Preschool-Aged Children: Numbers Increase but Most Not
in Preschool. Briefing Report to the Chairman, Subcommittee on Children,
Family, Drugs and Alcoholism, Committee on Labor and Human Resources,
U.S. Senate.
Author Affiliation: General Accounting Office, Washington, DC. Div.
of Human Resources.(BBB15464)
Pages: 81
Publication Date: July 1993
Report No: GAO/HRD-93-111BR
Available from: EDRS Price MF01/PC04 Plus Postage.
Availability: U.S. General Accounting Office, P.O. Box 6015, Gaithersburg,
MD 20884-6015 (first copy, free; additional copies, $2 each).
Language: English
Document Type: Numerical/Quantitative Data (110); Reports--Research
(143)
Geographic Source: U.S.; District of Columbia
Journal Announcement: RIEMAY1994
Government Level: Federal
Noting that
the increase in the number, diversity, and needs of disadvantaged
preschool-aged children poses potential obstacles to achieving the
first National Education Goal that by the year 2000 all children
in American will start school ready to learn, this document details
the number and characteristics of 3- and 4-year-old preschoolers,
and shows how the number and characteristics changed between 1980
and 1990. It also describes the differences in preschool participation
rates for children by income level, age, geographic location, and
other demographic characteristics. Composed predominantly of tables
and graphs, the document presents the data by racial and ethnic
group, linguistically isolated households (households in which no
one 14 years of age or older speaks English "very well"),
parental educational
attainment, and parental employment status. The findings presented
indicate that during the 1980s, the number of poor, near poor, and
at-risk children most likely to face difficulties upon entering
school, and who would have benefited the most from preschool programs,
increased by 28 percent; the number of poor preschool-aged children
increased in 46 states and became more concentrated in parts of
the South and Southwest; and children in minority groups comprised
about 57 percent of the poor preschool-aged population. (SM)
Descriptors: Access to Education; *Attendance Patterns; *High Risk
Students; Parent Background; Population Trends; *Poverty; *Preschool
Children; *Preschool Education; Program Improvement; Socioeconomic
Influences
Identifiers: Special Needs Children
