Sign up for Express
New from the Almanac, Express is an e-edition delivered via email each weekday.
Sign up to receive Express!
Login | Register
Sign up for eBulletins
Click for Menlo Park, California Forecast

Increase font Increase font
Decrease font Decrease font
Adjust text size
In search of high-quality preschool for all

Longtime local teacher seeks venue for mixed-income program


Bookmark and Share
With a Stanford University education and decades of hands-on experience with kids, Carol Thomsen of Menlo Park is something of an expert on the education of toddlers.

But in the years she spent nurturing the children of affluent families in top local preschools — and parenting her own — the thought kept nagging at her: "So many children are not getting that excellent start; it's just a crime."

Armed with little more than her experience and a belief in the transformative power of high-quality preschool, Ms. Thomsen is now seeking a venue to launch a mixed-income preschool like no other.

"Kelima" — meaning "all five" in Indonesia, where she once studied and taught — would start from birth and go to age 5, offering a full-day program along with a high dose of parent participation and education.

"At no other time in a person's life does the brain develop as rapidly as during the first years," wrote David Kirp, author of "The Sandbox Investment," a book Ms. Thomsen carries in her tote bag to share with anyone who will listen.

Even as scholars have documented the lasting advantages of high-quality preschool, Ms. Thomsen — who taught for many years at Stanford's Bing Nursery School and the Menlo Atherton Cooperative Nursery School — says she sees a growing "opportunity gap" for local babies.

"I just see the socioeconomic divide in this community becoming greater and greater, not less and less," she said. "The more I learn about that divide, the more I see that early childhood education is a great opportunity for parents to get together and see that children aren't that different.

"And the return on investment for early childhood education is just indisputable."

She rattles off the data: Low-income kids with quality preschool experiences "went to prison less, committed few violent crimes, stayed married longer, got married, stayed in high school, went to college more frequently — everything on the average life matrix of success, and not becoming a 'problem' to society," she said.

As of 2009, California spent more than $47,000 per prison inmate per year, according to the state Legislative Analyst's Office. The $20,000 price of a quality, full-day preschool is a better investment, she argues.

She's scouring for funding and for the right venue — with plenty of natural outdoor space, and easy to reach from both sides of U.S. 101 — to launch a mixed-income pilot program with 24 children in the fall of 2013.

Her own two sons were born during the 10 years she lived year-round at Stanford Sierra Camp at Fallen Leaf Lake, where her husband, Chris, was director until 1996. (He is now on the Board of Trustees of the Sequoia Union High School District.) When the family returned to this area, her younger son went through Bing Nursery School.

As for her older son, who lived in the mountains through age 5, she said, "I like to think he had me as a teacher."

She takes inspiration from her mother, a social worker whom she used to accompany to prisons, and her grandmother, who founded a preschool in Massachusetts that still operates today.

"When I think about why I'm doing this, I think they instilled in me the idea that with privilege comes responsibility," she said. "Anybody who got to go to Stanford University and have a good education is a privileged person.

"Whether you're an introvert or an extrovert, the social skills you learn in a high-quality preschool — how to learn, that the world is an exciting and interesting place that you can trust, to have the confidence to go out and get it — those skills will carry you for the rest of your life."


Comments
There are no comments yet for this story.
Be the first!

Add a Comment

Posting an item on Town Square is simple and requires no registration! Just complete this form and hit "submit" and your topic will appear online. Please be respectful and truthful in your postings so Town Square will continue to be a thoughtful gathering place for sharing community information and opinion. All postings are subject to our TERMS OF USE, and may be deleted if deemed inappropriate by our staff
 
We prefer that you use your real name, but you may use any "member" name you wish.

Name: *
Select your Neighborhood or School Community: * Not sure?
Choose a category: *
Since this is the first comment on this story a new topic will also be started in Town Square!
Please choose a category below that best describes this story.

Comment: *
Enter the verification code exactly as shown, using capital and lowercase letters, in the multi-colored box. *
Verification Code:   
197 page views
 

AlmanacNews.com   ©2013 Embarcadero Media.
All rights reserved.