Building a Stronger Foundation for the Right Start
June 19, 2014 – This week, the Michigan League for Public Policy released the annual report, Right Start in Michigan 2014: Maternal and Infant Well-Being in Michigan’s Legacy Cities. Each year, this report looks at the status of babies and their mothers through a series of birth outcomes. At the same time, Michigan’s Children updated our own look at high school graduation, High School Graduation Matters in the 2014 Elections. Both of these documents clearly illustrate that in the next budget cycle and with the next Legislature, more needs to be done to improve graduation rates for our most challenged young people – particularly for young mothers.
As we’ve talked about many times, despite significant improvements over the last several years in high school dropout rates – those kids who leave or are pushed out of high school before graduation – Michigan continues to struggle with real improvement in our 4-, 5- or 6-year graduation rates. We continue to see significant numbers of young people who are failing to graduate in a 4-year timetable, but are still trying to hang on toward a high school credential. Unfortunately, we’ve also seen flat or falling investment in the very programs that work for older youth.
The educational attainment of mothers is a key predictor of future success for children. Not only do parents with limited education have more limited income, but they may also face more challenges navigating systems like education and health care for their children. In 2012, fully one in eight births in Michigan was to a mother without a high school credential. We know that it will take young women who give birth in their teens, and often the young men who have fathered those children, more time and more flexible paths to succeed in high school, and we know that there are limited resources for adults who may want to come back to complete that credential after their children are a bit older.
This is unacceptable. The impact is clear – high school graduation at LEAST is essential to navigate our current economy and society. The more young people we leave behind because we haven’t provided enough flexible paths to help them build a strong educational foundation for their families; the more challenged Michigan’s communities, schools and economies will remain. And as the Right Start report indicates, this includes leaving behind our youngest children who may then face subsequent challenges as well.
Luckily, the elections in August and November give all of us a bully pulpit to make sure that decision-makers understand that we expect educational success for everyone, and that we will be glad to assist them if they commit to that path once in office. Be sure to talk to candidates about this issue if it is one you are particularly passionate about. Learn more about how you can get engaged in the elections by visiting the Michigan Sandbox Party website.
– Michele Corey