The Heckman Equation Project is supported by the Irving Harris Foundation, The Children's Initiative: A Project of the J.B. and M.K. Pritzker Family Foundation, the McCormick Foundation, and an anonymous funder.
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Early childhood education called a smart investment
By Nancy Cambria
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
November 17, 2009
In fact, James Heckman, an economist at the University of Chicago, said money
spent on early childhood education has quadrupled the benefits of money spent
on adult job training programs and far outpaces investments in high school or
college.
The Most Powerful Investment America Can Make
September 16, 2009
Consider the problem of rising income inequality. This is a problem that has its roots in disadvantage in early childhood. Unnoticed in recent discussions of income inequality is the growth in the percentage of American youth who are high school dropouts. Properly counted, the high school dropout rate is increasing.
Stimulating the Young
By Prof. James Heckman
The American
August 07, 2009
In times of economic adversity, governments look for temporary stimulus packages, be it cash for clunkers or shovel-ready jobs filling potholes. More often than not, they overlook America’s best economic stimulus package with lasting benefits long after the money is spent—investing in the youngest among us and producing significant
Prof. Heckman on NPR's Tell Me More
August 05, 2009
University of Chicago professor James Heckman is one of the nation's leading proponents of early childhood education. Heckman basis his advocacy on the belief that investing in children from birth through five years of age is essential and pays enormous dividends. The educator explains his theory and how he thinks schools can help children build a healthy foundation for life.
Opinion: Early Childhood Should Be a State Priority
By Mark Anderson
The Oregonian
June 04, 2009
Failing to invest today in early care and education will result in higher dropout rates, higher teen pregnancy, higher rates of incarceration, and numerous other expensive problems. Today's small problems will become tomorrow's much larger ones. And society (that means all of us) will end up paying most of the bills.
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