Why preschool matters in Mexico and bees thrive in Slovenia

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A preschool mandate set up children for success

Mexico began requiring three years of preschool education in 2004. Children born right after the cutoff date, who went to preschool under the mandate, performed better on math and Spanish tests in fifth and sixth grades than those born right before the cutoff date, a recent study found.   

They were also more likely to pay attention in class, take part in extracurricular activities, and do their homework, and less likely to skip classes. Students affected by the mandate were 9% more likely to finish high school and 11% more likely to attend some college.

Why We Wrote This

Whether laws or culture comes first, both shape the societies in our progress roundup. In Mexico, mandatory preschool is giving children a strong start. And in Slovenia, a national affinity for bees has prompted a high number of beekeepers and conservation measures.

Studies in high-income countries have shown mixed results on the outcomes for children receiving early childhood education. But the researchers in Mexico suggest that preschool policies implemented at scale in lower- and middle-income countries could have lasting effects.

Agencia El Universal/GDA/AP/File

Children play at a preschool in Monterrey, Mexico, in 2019.

Source: VoxDev



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