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We’re losing STEM teachers–here are 5 ways to keep them and grow the ones we need

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Key points:

The critical shortage of qualified STEM teachers continues to challenge schools and districts across the country. This is especially true in high-need schools where early-career or uncertified teachers are more common.

With almost half of all new educators leaving the profession within their first five years, and teacher satisfaction at its lowest in two decades, school and district leaders have a big task at hand. They not only need to fill open positions, but they need to put the structures into place to build a sustainable pipeline of STEM teachers. This is essential for providing students with engaging, hands-on, and equitable learning experiences. 

If you ask engineers, technicians, or other professionals what led them to their careers, you will almost always hear the same thing: “A teacher inspired me.” We all understand how essential STEM educators are in shaping future innovators. However, too often, we overlook what it takes to support and sustain the very teachers who spark that journey.

In a recent webinar, I facilitated a panel conversation with Dr. Josh Stewart, founder of Rocky Mountain Research & Strategy, and Jess Holman, STEM specialist at NSTA, who shared in-depth insights on this topic as well as practical strategies to support school and district leaders in this undertaking.

Here are takeaways from this conversation and five ways to effectively attract, retain, and support STEM teachers this school year and beyond.

1. Have a clear vision

When recruiting for open roles, remember that teachers are drawn to strong leadership, a clear school vision, and a culture that emphasizes innovation and respect. When leaders showcase their commitment to equity, professional growth, and student-centered learning, teachers are typically interested in joining–and staying at–that school.

During the recruitment period, highlight your school’s unique culture, use of technology, mentorship programs, and commitment to STEM innovation. With candidates, ask meaningful interview questions about their real-world teaching experience, instructional approach, and vision for their own classroom to ensure it is a mutual fit, but don’t overlook their soft skills. Relationship building, resilience, and adaptability are all qualities of an exemplary teacher.

Above all, it is important that any candidate is passionate about teaching and eager to make a difference in the classroom. These are the individuals who are worth investing in and the ones who are most likely to continue to show up and grow into the profession.

2. Leverage grow-your-own and apprenticeship programs

To meet immediate staffing needs, many districts are turning to teacher apprenticeship or “grow-your-own” (GYO) models. States like Tennessee, South Dakota, and Colorado, for example, have seen success with this structured pathway approach, especially when stipends and microcredential opportunities are offered to educators.

Developing strong and collaborative partnerships with post-secondary institutions is an important aspect of a successful GYO model. When school and district leaders clearly communicate the core competencies and skills they are looking for in their teachers, post-secondary institutions can make sure these areas are covered both in the coursework and the coaching and feedback these aspiring teachers receive. Alignment and dialog among districts and post-secondary institutions is key.

By launching or expanding local apprenticeship programs, schools and districts can also help paraprofessionals and community members earn STEM teaching credentials. This contributes to a more diverse, community-rooted workforce and reduces reliance on out-of-area hires.

3. Embrace hands-on technology

Passionate STEM teachers are often drawn to schools where they can engage students with real-world tools like 3D printers, robotics kits, coding platforms, simulations, probeware, and data analysis software.

Access to modern, hands-on technology can drive student engagement, while helping teachers feel confident, current, and creatively fulfilled. As such, equipping STEM classrooms with tools that support inquiry-based, student-centered learning is important. Equally important is providing teachers with training on these technologies and allotting them planning time to incorporate these tools into their lessons.

4. Support NGSS-aligned instruction and real-world learning

From learning about local weather patterns and nearby waterways to understanding how food impacts the human body, authentic STEM learning involves engaging students with real-world phenomena.

However, making the instructional shift to teach the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) can be hard. It requires strong instructional leadership–school and district leaders need to truly understand what three-dimensional, NGSS-aligned instruction looks like in action so they can support teachers with the implementation of it in a way that’s meaningful, not just evaluative.

School and district leaders can further support teachers with the shift to NGSS-aligned instruction by offering time to successfully implement new lessons, encouraging innovation and getting outside of their comfort zone, setting realistic goals together, and celebrating shared progress.

5. Cultivate a culture of belonging, mentorship, and purpose

STEM teachers, especially those early in their careers, can feel isolated or burned out if the right supports are not in place. This is why providing robust professional learning aligned to teachers’ interests and goals is so important, particularly when it comes to helping teachers build their professional identity early on in their careers.

Creating STEM-focused professional learning communities (PLCs), having teachers share the best practices they learn at conferences, encouraging participation in industry or regional associations, suggesting virtual networks to join, matching new teachers with subject-specific mentors, and giving time for cross-discipline collaboration with fellow teachers to take place can all help create community and a culture of belonging, which is a gamechanger for teacher retention.

This culture is especially important for recruiting and retaining STEM teachers from diverse backgrounds. Today, more than 50 percent of students enrolled in public schools are students of color—however, 80 percent of teachers are white. Setting educators up to stay and grow in the profession helps ensure students have access to teachers who reflect their identities.

The power of effective STEM teachers

Recruiting and retaining STEM teachers isn’t just about filling vacancies–it’s about giving every student a steady opportunity to be seen, challenged, and inspired by educators who believe in their potential, whether or not they choose a career in science. 

When students have access to consistent, purpose-driven teachers–especially those who bring a variety of life experiences to the classroom–they not only perform better academically, they begin to see themselves as future scientists, engineers, and change makers. In fact, when students have effective teachers for even three years in a row, their performance can jump as much as 50 percent. That’s the power of teacher stability and support.

At a time when schools face growing complexity and competing demands, it is essential to focus on what matters: building classrooms where all students feel connected, curious, and capable. That starts with supporting the people who guide them every day.

Let’s make sure those teachers have every reason to stay–and every opportunity to thrive.

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Being shut out of required courses is delaying college students’ graduation

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Ryan Arnoldy started community college with the goal of eventually transferring to a four-year university and getting a degree in chemical engineering.

Soon Arnoldy started running up against the same exasperating bottleneck faced by a majority of university and college students: Classes required for his major were often not taught during the semesters he needed them, or filled so quickly there were no seats left.

Colleges and universities manage to provide these required courses when their students need to take them only about 15 percent of the time, new research shows — a major reason fewer than half of students graduate on time, raising the amount it costs and time it takes to get degrees. 

Now, with widespread layoffs and budget cuts on campuses, and as consumers are already increasingly questioning the value of a college education, the problem is expected to get worse. 

“What is more foundational to what we do as colleges and universities than offering courses to students so they can graduate? And yet we’re only doing it right 15 percent of the time,” said Tom Shaver, founder and CEO of Ad Astra, a company that provides scheduling software to 550 universities and whose research is the basis for that statistic.

Three years into his time at Johnson County Community College in Overland Park, Kansas, Arnoldy has completed so few required credits that he changed his major to computer science, almost lost his financial aid, considered dropping out and wasted time in classes he found irrelevant but were the only ones available. 

And he still has at least a year to go.

Though he’s determined to finish, and has narrowly held onto enough scholarships and grants to stay in school, being shut out of courses he needed to graduate means “I am going to literally spend four years in a community college to get a two-year degree,” said Arnoldy, who is 21. 

At one point, when he went to his counselor’s office for help with this, he remembered, “I was bawling. It seems like things should be simpler. A lot of my peers are frustrated, too.”

This kind of experience is, in fact, widespread. Fifty-seven percent of students at all levels of higher education end up having to spend more time and money on college because their campuses don’t offer required courses when they need them, according to a study last year by Ad Astra

Though its scheduling work means the company has a vested interest in highlighting this problem, independent scholars and university administrators generally confirm the finding.

“We’re forcing students to literally decelerate their progress to degrees, by telling them to do something they can’t actually do,” Shaver said. 

Related: Interested in innovations in higher education? Subscribe to our free biweekly higher education newsletter.

Scheduling university and college courses is complex. Yet rather than use advanced technology to do it, some institutions still rely on “old-school” methods that include producing hard-copy spreadsheets, according to administrators trying to address the issue.

Mounting layoffs and budget problems in the wake of enrollment declines and federal spending cuts threaten to make this problem worse. 

Colleges and universities have collectively laid off thousands of faculty and staff in the last six months, with more downsizing expected. Others are further trimming their number of courses. 

The cash-strapped California State University system has eliminated 1,430 course sections this year, across seven of its 23 campuses, or 7 percent of the total at those campuses, a spokeswoman, Amy Bentley-Smith, confirmed. These include sections of required courses. At Cal State Los Angeles, for example, the number of sections of a required Introduction to American Government course has been reduced from 14 to nine.

“I would expect that course shutouts will start to get worse,” said Kevin Mumford, director of the Purdue University Research Center in Economics, who has also studied this.

In addition to taking longer and spending more to graduate, students who are shut out of required courses often change their majors, as Arnoldy did, or drop out, Mumford’s and other research has concluded.

Together with economists at Brigham Young University, Mumford found that when first-year students at Purdue couldn’t get into a required course, they were 35 percentage points less likely to ever take it and 25 percentage points less likely to enroll in any other course in the same subject. 

The students were part of a freshman class in 2018 that was 7 percent larger than expected, and more than half could not get into at least one of their top six requested courses.

Many changed their majors — especially away from science, technology, engineering or math, often abbreviated STEM. Every required STEM course a student couldn’t get into lowered the probability that he or she would major in one of those fields, according to the study, which was released in May. 

Women, already underrepresented in STEM, were particularly likely to quit, the study found. 

“There’s already a lot of pressure on women in STEM fields, and this appears to be just one obstacle too many,” Mumford said. 

Related: The Hechinger Report’s Tuition Tracker helps reveal the real cost of college

For every course they couldn’t get into, in any subject, women — though not men — were also more than 7 percent less likely to graduate within four years, with a financial toll averaging $800 for additional tuition and housing plus $1,500 in forgone wages.

Students at U.S. colleges and universities already spend more time and money getting their degrees than they expect to. Though 90 percent of freshmen say they plan to finish a four-year degree within four years or less, according to a national survey by an institute at UCLA last administered in 2019, federal data show that fewer than half of them do. More than a third still haven’t graduated after six years.

At community colleges nationwide, students who can’t get into courses they need are up to 28 percent more likely to take no classes at all that term, contributing to those delays in graduation, a 2021 study by scholars at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and the nonprofit Mathematica concluded. Two years later, they found, the students were up to 34 percent more likely to have transferred to a different school, a decision that typically costs even more time and money.

Shaver, of Ad Astra, called course scheduling “one of the most mathematically complex optimization problems out there.” 

It requires balancing student demand with the availability of classrooms, labs and full- and part-time faculty, who are typically limited to teaching a maximum number of courses per term, take sabbaticals and sometimes prefer that their classes meet on Mondays through Thursdays in the middle of those days. 

Related: To fill seats, more colleges offer credit for life experience

An increase in the number of students with double majors, minors and concentrations further complicates the process. So do the challenges confronted by part-time and older students, who typically don’t live on campus and have to juggle families and jobs. Such students are expected to comprise a growing proportion of enrollment as the number of 18- to 24-year-olds declines. 

“There are so many obstacles students face, from transportation to work schedules to child care. Some can only take classes in the afternoon or on the weekends,” said Matt Jamison, associate vice president of academic success at Front Range Community College in Colorado. 

Meanwhile, “we have instructors that have [outside] jobs and aren’t always available. And faculty can teach only so many courses.”

But Jamison found that students were being shut out of required classes at his college for other reasons that seemed harder to explain. 

Front Range offers in-person courses on three campuses and others that can be streamed online in real time, for instance. But class periods on the separate campuses and online had different starting and ending times. 

“Students couldn’t get courses they needed because they were scheduled over each other,” Jamison said.

Now the college has synchronized the schedules on all of its campuses and for courses taught live online. It’s adding course sections to better keep up with demand.

None of this is simple, Jamison said. The response from some faculty and staff on his campus about changing long-standing routines, he said, is “ ‘This is the way we’ve always done it.’ But it’s not necessarily the best way to do it.” 

Front Range is one of several colleges and universities trying to improve the chances that its students can get into the courses they need to graduate. Others are using more online courses to help students meet requirements. 

In California’s rural Central Valley, for example, community college students struggled to get into the advanced math courses they need toward degrees in STEM; only a third of the 15 community colleges in the area consistently offer the courses. So the University of California, Merced, launched a pilot program during the summer to provide these required classes online.

At Johnson County Community College, where Ryan Arnoldy goes, executive vice president and provost Michael McCloud acknowledged that students sometimes can’t get into classes they need. A big part of the problem, he said, is that they don’t meet with advisers who can help them plan their routes to degrees — a behavior he said he has seen increasingly among younger generations of students.

To address this, the college has begun requiring students to meet with advisers who can help them better plan which courses to take, and when. A small-scale pilot program showed that this, along with added tutoring and other student supports, improved success rates, McCloud said. The idea is being rolled out to all students.

“The hope is that this will help us on the scheduling end of things,” McCloud said. 

Related: A new way to help some college students: Zero percent, no-fee loans

Texas A&M University-San Antonio is using data to better track how many students are in each major, how many new students are expected, how many students fail and need to repeat required courses and whether there is capacity to increase class enrollments, said Duane Williams, associate vice provost of student success and retention.

“We have to be making the best decisions, and we can’t make them blindly,” Williams said.

The surprising fact that departments haven’t always done that, he said, is partly because “some folks may not have received the proper training. You would think higher ed as a whole would have systems for this, but some do, some don’t. Some are still doing it old school, where they’re just going to keep something on a sheet of paper.”

That may have been enough when there seemed to be an unlimited supply of students. But as public scrutiny of universities and colleges intensifies, and with enrollment projected to decline, institutions are pressed “to help students get in and get out and with the least amount of debt as possible,” Williams said.

Improving the scheduling of required courses seems a comparatively simple way to do this, Mumford said.

“For universities that have all these goals about getting students to graduate or to get more students into STEM,” he said, “this seems like a much cheaper thing to solve than many of the other interventions they’re considering.”

Contact writer Jon Marcus at 212-678-7556, jmarcus@hechingerreport.org or jpm.82 on Signal.

This story about shortages of required courses was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for our higher education newsletter. Listen to our higher education podcast.

The Hechinger Report provides in-depth, fact-based, unbiased reporting on education that is free to all readers. But that doesn’t mean it’s free to produce. Our work keeps educators and the public informed about pressing issues at schools and on campuses throughout the country. We tell the whole story, even when the details are inconvenient. Help us keep doing that.

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New Jersey’s ‘Abbott districts’ are 25 years into offering free, high quality pre-K, but at least 10,000 eligible kids haven’t enrolled

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This story about Abbott districts was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for the Hechinger newsletter.

UNION CITY, N.J. — By 7:30 a.m., Jackson had started rushing his father, José Bernard, to leave their house. “Dad, we’re going! We’re going, come on, let’s go.” 

The 4-year-old was itching to return to his favorite place: Eugenio Maria de Hostos Center for Early Childhood Education, a burst of orange and blue on the corner of Union City’s bustling Kennedy Boulevard. 

These small moments stick out for Jackson’s father. A year and a half earlier, as a young toddler coming out of daycare, Jackson was nonverbal.

“It’s life-changing, I’ll be honest with you,” said Bernard, who grew up in Union City in Hudson County. The city is home to one of the urban districts in New Jersey with universal and free preschool, created as part of a slate of remedies meant to make up for uneven funding between rich and poor districts in the state.

At the center, young voices try out vowel sounds in Spanish, English and Mandarin, present projects about fish and sea turtles, count plastic ice cream scoops and learn rules of the classroom through song. 

“They are the absolute best school that I’ve ever known,” Bernard said. “It’s a chain reaction from the principal all the way down … I made the best decision for my son, 100 percent.”

Starting in the 1980s, courts hearing the landmark school funding case Abbott v. Burke sought to equalize spending across New Jersey’s schools. Districts located in areas with higher property values were able to spend more on their schools than poor urban districts could — a disparity that was found to violate the state’s constitutional requirement to provide a “thorough and efficient” education for all of New Jersey’s schoolchildren.

The Abbott litigation spawned several decisions by the state Supreme Court, one of which was a 1998 ruling that mandated free preschool for 3- and 4-year-old children in 28 of its highest-poverty urban school districts. That number has since grown to 31.

Children at Maria de Hostos Center practice fine motor skills with fingerpainting. Credit: Marianna McMurdock/The Hechinger Report

The state department of education set an ambitious goal of enrolling 90 percent of eligible children in each district, and opened classrooms in private, nonprofit and public settings in the 1999-2000 school year. At that time, New Jersey was the only state to mandate preschool, starting at age 3, for children facing social and academic risk.

“The court recognized that to get kids caught up they need to start off by somehow leveling the playing field from the very beginning, and the best way to do that was with early childhood education,” said Danielle Farrie, research director at the Newark-based Education Law Center, which represented districts for decades in the long-running case. 

Related: Young children have unique needs, and providing the right care can be a challenge. Our free early childhood education newsletter tracks the issues. 

As the program continued into its 25th year, researchers have found that the endeavor worked to reduce learning gaps and special education rates between rich and poor children — for those it has reached.

However, over 10,000 children eligible for the program are not enrolled, particularly 3-year-olds, according to a recent assessment of the program by The Education Law Center. 

Supporters worry that the state’s recently established focus on expanding preschool throughout the state could draw attention and resources away from the early-learning program created by the Abbott litigation.  

When it comes to reaching at least 90 percent of the low-income children in the 31 districts targeted by the lawsuit, “we haven’t come anywhere close to meeting those goals,” Farrie said. “To us it’s a question of priorities.”

Adriana Birne, the principal of Maria de Hostos Center and director of early childhood programs for Union City schools in Hudson County, said her program collaborates closely with parents. Credit: Marianna McMurdock/The Hechinger Report

Designed by early learning experts, the preschools were intended from the start to offer a high-quality program. Class sizes are limited to no more than 15 students, and each class has a certified teacher and an assistant. The school day is six hours, and transportation and health services are offered as needed. Teachers are paid on par with K-3 teachers in their district, and the program’s curriculum conforms to New Jersey’s standards of quality in early education.

“Our special sauce is that we provide opportunities for the families,” said Adriana Birne, director of Union City’s early childhood offerings and principal at Eugenio Maria de Hostos Center, where parents are invited in as jurors for special class projects, readers for storytime, or as guests for school plays.  “We enforce the idea that it’s a collaborative effort — moms, dads, teachers, children all working together for success for their little ones.” 

The preschool programs have tried to serve as many eligible kids as possible by providing slots at public schools as well as private childcare providers, Head Start programs, YMCAs and nonprofits that agree to meet the state’s standards.

By many measures, the targeted preschool program has been successful in boosting long-term academic gains for their students. The state ranks in the nation’s top 10 for child well-being and second for education after Massachusetts, based on fourth grade test scores and high school graduation rates. 

However, in the 2024-25 school year the program enrolled only 34,082 kids, about 78 percent of those eligible, across public, private and nonprofit providers. Last year, only five of the 31 districts reached the 90 percent target for enrolling eligible children, compared to 18 districts in 2009-10. Enrollment has been steadily declining, a trend accelerated by the pandemic, the Education Law Center report states.

Related: OPINION: The pandemic wiped out decades of progress for preschoolers. It’s time to get them back on track

Experts say it can be difficult to find eligible kids because many have only recently moved into the state and their parents haven’t yet heard of the program through word of mouth. Some families believe 3 is too young for school, or are immigrants fearful of raids now being conducted at school sites. 

A few district-run programs like Perth Amboy’s require parents to show a government-issued ID or Social Security number to enroll their children. The district enrolled only 63 percent of its eligible 3-year-olds in the 2023-24 school year. The ACLU of New Jersey has previously challenged such requirements, saying they are unconstitutional. 

Programs also aren’t recruiting as aggressively as they did when the program began. Cindy Shields, who led a preschool site in Perth Amboy from 2004 to 2013 and is now a senior policy analyst for Advocates for Children of New Jersey, said she used to recruit at playgrounds, churches, laundromats, supermarkets and nail salons — anywhere families were. 

Districts once advertised preschool in the plastic table settings of local restaurants, said Ellen Frede, who helped design the Abbott preschool program and ran the state’s implementation team. Frede is now co-director of the National Institute for Early Education Research, or NIEER, based at Rutgers University in New Jersey.

In its heyday, the large team of experts that formed the state pre-K office could also enforce corrective action plans for failing to reach enrollment targets, Frede said.

But during Republican Gov. Chris Christie’s administration from 2010 to 2018, pre-K was reduced to barebone levels. In 2011, New Jersey’s early childhood budget — already only a small fraction of overall education dollars in the state — was slashed 20 percent, causing recruitment efforts to dwindle. 

Though funding and political support for preschool was restored under Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy — who recently signed a budget that invests about $1.3 billion in statewide preschool over the next fiscal year — funding for the state department of education’s early childhood arm overseeing the endeavor hasn’t grown in tandem.

Today, “we have a much smaller early childhood office that is actually attempting to expand this program across the entire state without that same kind of attention to detail,” said Farrie, with the Education Law Center.

Related: Pre-K at budget crossroads

While New Jersey stands out in an early childhood landscape that can be grim in terms of quality and pay, investing roughly $16,000 per pupil, high quality preschool is very costly to operate. The state-funded preschools in the districts named in the Abbott litigation require pay parity with public school teachers, yet many districts and private providers operate on low wages and razor thin profit margins. Increases in liability insurance costs for child care providers and preschools is another strain.

The state has also cut back on incentives like bonuses and college scholarships for teachers to enter the program. Such incentives were common in the early years of the state-funded program, resulting in a teaching population that is more diverse and reflective of the student body than K-12 teachers at large. In the 2024-25 school year, 22 and 25 percent of preschool teachers in the 31 districts with universal preschool were Black and Hispanic, compared to just 6 and 9 percent of K-12 educators in New Jersey, respectively. 

A teacher and children play at Noah’s Ark Preschool. Credit: Marianna McMurdock/The Hechinger Report

State board of education scholarships helped pay college costs for Euridice Correa, a teacher at Eugenio Maria de Hostos Center. Correa, affectionately called “La Reina” or “queen” by some parents, is Jackson’s teacher. She’s now in her 18th year as an early childhood educator. 

Correa, who moved to New Jersey from Colombia at nine years old, earned degrees from New Jersey City University thanks to incentives offered in the early years of the court-mandated preschool program.

“I was very poor. I was still working as a cleaner and helping in the daycare,” she said. The state “paid for my whole B.A. and for half of my Master’s with bilingual certification.” 

New Jersey, said Shields, the analyst with Advocates for Children of New Jersey, used to offer “college money, they had incentives, they had sign-on bonuses. They were giving teachers laptops, and we know that it worked. They created this beautiful diverse workforce of teachers that looked just like the children. But we don’t have that anymore.” 

A spokesperson for the state department of education said that paths to bring teachers into the profession “remain a priority in New Jersey to support early childhood educators, particularly in community-based settings.” They cited the Grow NJ Kids scholarship program, which offers scholarships for family care providers and preschool teachers to get additional training. 

Despite expansion and sustainability challenges, research shows the preschools created through the Abbott litigation have helped close the educational gaps that Black, Latino and low-income children were facing. 

By fifth grade, students who were part of the preschool program scored higher on math, literacy and science tests than New Jersey kids who did not attend. Through 10th grade, researchers found their grade retention and special education rates were down 15 and 7 percent respectively.

Researchers found double the impact on scores for kids like Jackson who are enrolled for two years — enough to make up for a third of the achievement gap between Black and white children. Thousands of kids have entered K-12 more prepared. As a result, Union City moved its algebra offerings from ninth to seventh grade. 

Karen Marino, the founder of Noah’s Ark Preschool in Highland Park, contracts with New Brunswick schools in Middlesex County to provide seats for children through the state-funded Abbott program. The state provides money to public and private providers in 31 districts to offer a full-day program for 3- and 4-year-olds. Credit: Marianna McMurdock/The Hechinger Report

Related: States spending more overall on pre-K, but there are still haves and have nots 

“It gives a baseline. You can change things all the way up,” said Steven Barnett, NIEER’s co-director and founder, who is now researching higher education outcomes for Abbott preschoolers. There’s evidence from other communities that quality preschools can affect children into adulthood: Oklahoma’s universal pre-K for 4-year-olds, one of the nation’s oldest, is linked to a 12 percent increase in college enrollment

The programs have also been able to offer enrichment for their students that would otherwise be impossible to fund. 

At Noah’s Ark Preschool, a private provider in Highland Park in Middlesex County, 3-year-olds hold full conversations, sharing about their trips to see family out of state or weekend plans to go to local pools. They’ve learned to write their names and read signs. 

Early learning years are so much more than just learning ABCs or shapes, said founder Karen Marino. “It’s really about their independence,” she said, adding that she started Noah’s Ark after looking for affordable care for her own three children years ago, one of whom now runs the site. Her school has contracted with New Brunswick schools in Middlesex County to offer seats since the program began. 

Farther north in Passaic, the nonprofit Children’s Day Preschool serves over 120 kids learning social and fine motor skills through play. With fundraising, the school, in Passaic County, was able to afford renovations, a full-time art therapist and a nurse for their community of mostly Mexican, Peruvian, Colombian, Puerto Rican and Dominican families. 

Children’s Day feels for many like an extension of home, with family recipes lining the walls and bilingual instructions for parents on how to ask about their child’s day at school: “Did you learn something new? Who made you smile today? Did you help someone today or did someone help you?”

Many of their educators have been teaching at the site for 15 to 20 years. James Acosta, who attended the center as a child and is now is not a digital media assistant, said returning to work was “like seeing like aunts and uncles saying, ‘you’re so big now!’” 

A child runs through the playground at Children’s Day Preschool in Passaic County. Credit: Marianna McMurdock/The Hechinger Report
Two preschoolers at Children’s Day Preschool in Passaic, N.J., play on the monkey bars during recess. Passaic is one of 31 New Jersey districts receiving state support to provide preschool for local children. Credit: Marianna McMurdock/The Hechinger Report

Abbott supporters hope more families will join the program. Parent Candy Vitale’s  6-year-old son, Mateo, is reading at a second-grade level and learning how to solve for an unknown “x” in math equations.  

Vitale spent the equivalent of a monthly mortgage payment so her older daughter could attend a comparable half-day pre-K at the Jersey Shore. She learned of the offerings in Union City from her partner, whose older children had attended. 

“This is the foundation of loving learning, and loving school, and feeling loved at school,” Vitale said. “Knowing that I was dropping him off every day, and he was in a place that he absolutely was enamored by — I think that there’s no price tag you can put on that.”

Contact the editor of this story, Christina Samuels, at 212-678-3635, via Signal at cas.37 or samuels@hechingerreport.org

This story about Abbott districts was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Sign up for the Hechinger newsletter.

The Hechinger Report provides in-depth, fact-based, unbiased reporting on education that is free to all readers. But that doesn’t mean it’s free to produce. Our work keeps educators and the public informed about pressing issues at schools and on campuses throughout the country. We tell the whole story, even when the details are inconvenient. Help us keep doing that.

Join us today.



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Sparkwork Group Appoints Venkatesh N S as CTO to Drive AI-Powered Personalized Learning at SisuCare Education

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SisuCare Education, part of Sparkwork Group, today announced the appointment of Venkatesh N S as Chief Technology Officer (CTO). With over 23 years of experience building and scaling technology across education, healthcare, fintech, and AI-driven platforms, Venkatesh will lead SisuCare’s technology strategy as the company accelerates its mission to deliver trusted, AI-powered, personalized learning for learners and educators worldwide.

Venkatesh’s career has been defined by building systems that empower people and creating technology that makes a difference. Over 23 years, Venkatesh has led large-scale digital transformation initiatives, architected global cloud-native solutions reaching millions of users, and built AI-powered platforms. He holds several U.S. patents in virtualization technologies and has published multiple technical papers on scalable cloud architectures and related innovations, underscoring his commitment to driving innovation in scalable, high-impact technologies. Equally important, Venkatesh is recognized for his leadership in mentoring high-performing teams, nurturing a culture of innovation, and championing human-centered design.

“These values have guided me throughout my journey, from my early days as an engineer to leading global technology teams: innovate with purpose, work together, and always keep the human at the center of the technology,” said Venkatesh. “At SisuCare, we have the opportunity to combine cutting-edge AI with the care and insight of great educators, creating adaptive learning experiences that respond in real time to each student’s needs.”

Strengthening Technology Leadership and Team Excellence

Venkatesh joins SisuCare to strengthen the technology team and provide mentorship, leadership, and strategy. As CTO, he will help shape clear priorities, support team growth, and ensure the work consistently advances SisuCare’s mission and the needs of learners and educators.

“I believe the future of education is not just about delivering content, but about delivering transformation,” Venkatesh added. “If we do this right, we won’t just be improving education, we’ll be reshaping the future of how the world learns.”

“We’re thrilled to welcome Venkatesh to SisuCare,” said Bijay Baniya, CEO of SisuCare & Sparkwork. “Venkatesh brings a rare blend of technical depth, experience operating at scale, and business leadership. His track record of building global, cloud-native AI platforms and his commitment to purposeful innovation make him the perfect leader to advance our vision for truly personalized learning. Together, we’ll empower educators, inspire learners, and set a new standard for responsible AI in education.”

Near-Term Focus Areas Under Venkatesh’s Leadership

  • A scalable, cloud-native platform for adaptive, real-time learning experiences
  • Responsible and transparent AI: privacy, safety, and inclusion by design
  • Powerful educator tools that amplify teaching, assessment, and mentorship
  • Global readiness and interoperability with institutions and partners
  • A culture of innovation: mentorship, cross-functional collaboration, and rapid experimentation

About SisuCare

SisuCare Education is a California-based nursing education provider approved by the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) to deliver training for Certified Nurse Assistant (CNA) and Certified Home Health Aide (CHHA) programs, as well as offering a Director of Staff Development (DSD) certification. As one of California’s largest self-paced and hybrid CNA training programs, SisuCare meets learners where they learn best, providing opportunities to thousands of students needing access and flexible options beyond a traditional, fully in-person training model. Sisucare Education is part of Sparkwork Group, which offers global enterprise learning and education platforms to businesses. With this appointment, SisuCare strengthens its position at the intersection of education and AI, advancing its mission to prepare learners for the future of work.

Media Contact
Company Name: SisuCare Education (Sparkwork Group)
Contact Person: Bijay Baniya, CEO (Chief Executive Officer)
Email: Send Email
Phone: (213) 537-8360
City: Stanton
State: CA
Country: United States
Website: www.sisucare.com



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