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Experts

Our file of experts is organized into the following categories: Advocates, Academics, Preschool & K-12 Educators, Economists, Business Supporters, Other Supporters, and Organizational Leaders.

A growing number of academics, researchers, advocates, economists, law-enforcement leaders, business people and others are well positioned to comment on the importance of quality preschool.

Advocates

Maryann O'Sullivan, J.D.

mosullivan@preschoolcalifornia.org
By telephone contact Michele Stillwell-Parvensky at (510) 271-0075 x317

Maryann O’Sullivan is Founder and CEO of Preschool California and a 20-year veteran of children’s and health policy advocacy in California. She was the founding State Director for Fight Crime: Invest in Kids California and has served as a consultant to health policy advocates seeking to influence the newly democratic government of South Africa. Her areas of expertise include the California preschool landscape, teacher quality, education and economic benefits, and making the case for a “universal” preschool system in California. Read her November 2004 op-ed in the Fresno Bee.

 

Libby Doggett, Ph.D

ldoggett@preknow.org
By telephone contact DeDe Dunevant: (202) 862-9862

Libby Doggett is executive director of Pre-K Now, a national advocacy and public education organization that collaborates with state advocates to inform policy makers, the media and the general public about the potential of pre-kindergarten to improve outcomes for America’s young children. Prior to joining Pre-K Now, she directed the HeadsUp! reading program at the National Head Start Association. Her areas of expertise include the national preschool landscape; state efforts to expand preschool access; and teacher quality.

 

Barrie Becker

bbecker@calfightcrime.org
(510) 836-2050

Barrie Becker is Director of Fight Crime: Invest in Kids California, which advocates for crime-prevention programs such as early care and education programs for preschoolers and young children, after school programs, mental health services for youth and child abuse prevention programs. She previously served as Executive Director of Legal Community Against Violence.

 

Ted Lempert

tlempert@childrennow.org
(510) 763-2444

Ted Lempert is President of Children Now, a national research and advocacy organization. He was the founding CEO of EdVoice, a California grassroots organization advocating for education reform and support for public education. He currently serves on the San Mateo County Board of Education. Earlier in his career, Lempert represented San Mateo and Santa Clara counties in the California Assembly.

 

David Lawrence, Jr.

dlawrence@childreadiness.org
(305) 646-7229

Dave Lawrence is president of The Early Childhood Initiative Foundation and former publisher of The Miami Herald. He played a key role in the passage of Florida’s 2004 constitutional amendment to provide preschool for all 4 year olds statewide. He has also been a leader in The Children’s Trust, the Early Learning Coalition of Miami-Dade/Monroe and the Florida Partnership for School Readiness. In June 2005, Lawrence gave a powerful presentation to members of the Pennsylvania General Assembly on the importance of preschool.

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Academics

Steve Barnett

sbarnett@nieer.org
(732) 932-4350

Steve Barnett is Director of the National Institute of Early Education Research (NIEER) and professor of education economics and public policy at Rutgers University. Recent publications include Lives in the Balance, a benefit-cost analysis of preschool education based on a 25-year study. His areas of expertise include the economic and educational benefits of preschool; the national preschool landscape; and teacher qualifications.

 

Lucy Crain, M.D.

lcrain@itsa.ucsf.edu
By telephone through San Francisco FIRST 5: (415) 934-4849

Dr. Lucy Crain was the founding director of the UCSF Pediatric Disabilities and Down Syndrome Clinic and is a past regional chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics. She chairs the San Francisco FIRST 5 Commission, as well as on the California Children’s Partnership Health Policy Board and High Risk Infant Advisory Committee. Her areas of expertise include the importance of quality preschool and preventive health measures for children. Read her June 2005 letter to the editor of the San Francisco Examiner.

 

Linda Espinosa

espinosal@missouri.edu
(573) 882-2659

Linda Espinosa is Professor of Early Childhood Education at the University of Missouri, Columbia, and former Co-Director of the National Institute for Early Education Research at Rutgers University. She is a former preschool teacher and elementary school principal. Her areas of expertise include preschool teacher training and quality, effective preschool programs for at-risk children, and the design of effective curriculum and assessment for English language learners.

 

Eugene Garcia

Eugene.garcia@asu.edu
(480) 965-1329

Eugene Garcia is Dean of the College of Education at Arizona State University. He chairs the National Task Force on Early Childhood Education of Hispanics. He is author of Hispanic Education in the US: Raices y Alas. His areas of expertise include the early learning needs of English language learners and the underrepresentation of Latino children in preschool programs.

 

William Gormley

gormleyw@georgetown.edu
(202) 687-6817

William Gormley is co-director of the Center for Research on Children in the U.S. (CROCUS) at Georgetown University. He is also principal investigator for Georgetown University's evaluation of Oklahoma's universal preschool program, which has a higher participation rate than any other preschool program in the country. His areas of expertise include the impact of preschool on children as they enter K-12.
Gormley is extensively interviewed in a great NPR piece on Oklahoma's universal preschool system. You can also read an article by William Gormley, recently published in the journal Developmental Psychology.

 

Suzanne Helburn

snhelburn@earthlink.net
(303) 443-2408

Suzanne Helburn is Professor Emerita of Economics at the University of Colorado, Denver. She was the principle investigator of the landmark Cost, Quality, and Child Outcomes in Child Care Centers which brought together a team of researchers from four universities to complete the most comprehensive study to date of U.S. child care centers and their impact on children. She is co-author of America’s Child Care Problem and of the recently published The Great Divide: Retro vs. Metro America, a primer on U.S. politics. Her areas of preschool expertise include program quality, the economics of child care/preschool, and the status of the preschool workforce.

 

Carollee Howes

howes@gseis.ucla.edu
(310) 825-8336

Carollee Howes is Professor of Psychological Studies in Education at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her research primarily revolves around the social and emotional development of young children. She co-authored, with Suzanne Helburn, Child Care Cost and Quality. Her areas of expertise include child care and preschool program and teacher quality.

 

David Kirp

kirp@berkeley.edu
(510) 642-7531

David Kirp is a Professor of Public Policy at the University of California, Berkeley. He was the founding director of the Center for Law and Education and has also worked as a journalist. He has written about preschool for national publications, and has a new book coming out in August 2007, The Sandbox Investment: The Preschool Movement and Kids-First Politics. Read his November 2004 article on the Perry Preschool study in the New York Times Magazine, his July 2005 article in the Times’ Education Life supplement, and his May 2007 op-ed in the San Jose Mercury News.

 

Deborah Stipek

stipek@stanford.edu
(650) 725-9090

Deborah Stipek is the Dean of the School of Education at Stanford University. She worked as a legislative assistant in the Office of U.S. Senator Bill Bradley and served for five years on the Board on Children, Youth and Families at the National Research Council. Her areas of expertise include: early childhood development, achievement and motivation, classroom instruction and issues related to child and family policy.

 

Ross Thompson, Ph.D

rathompson@ucdavis.edu
(510) 754-6663

Ross A. Thompson is Professor of Psychology at the University of California, Davis. He is a founding member of the National Scientific Council on the Developing Child, and was a member of the National Academy of Sciences committee that produced the landmark report, From Neurons to Neighborhoods: The Science of Early Childhood Development. His expertise includes early parent-child relationships, the development of emotion understanding, emotion regulation, conscience, and self-understanding, and children’s brain development prior to kindergarten. Read his July 2005 interview in the Sacramento Bee.

 

Marcy Whitebook

mwhbk@uclink.berkeley.edu
(510) 643-7091

Marcy Whitebook is director and senior researcher at the Center for the Study of Child Care Employment, Institute of Industrial Relations, University of California, Berkeley. She has served as project director for several large-scale child care studies and has developed a program designed to encourage professional development and retention of early childhood educators. Her latest book is By a Thread: How Centers Hold Onto Teachers; How Teachers Build Lasting Careers. Her areas of expertise include teacher and program quality, and teacher preparation programs.

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Preschool & K-12 Educators

Jack O'Connell

Contact through Hillary McLean: hmclean@cde.ca.gov
(916) 319-0818

Jack O’Connell is California’s State Superintendent of Public Instruction. He represented the Central Coast for 2 decades in the State Legislature, where he chaired policy committees including Senate Education and authored numerous landmark education bills, including legislation to establish a high school exit exam and California’s successful class-size reduction program. In 2004, O’Connell convened a new statewide P-16 Council, whose purpose is to better coordinate and integrate education in California, from preschool to college.  In his 2005 “State of Education” speech, he called for California to make quality preschool available to all 4 year olds statewide.

 

Armando Argandoña

awa1540@lausd.k12.ca.us
(916) 780-5331

Armando Argandoña is President of the California Kindergarten Association, a statewide professional association of kindergarten teachers. He is a nationally certified Early Childhood Generalist and taught kindergarten in the L.A. Unified School District for 10 years. He now works as a district primary school literacy coach, focusing on preschool through second grade. He speaks from experience about the difference quality preschool can make in children’s ability to succeed in school, both socially and academically.

 

David Gordon

dgordon@scoe.net
(916) 228-2500

David Gordon is Sacramento County Superintendent of Schools. Prior to joining the Sacramento County Office of Education, he served as Superintendent of the Elk Grove Unified School District, a pioneer in the effort to expand preschool programs for 4-year-olds. His areas of expertise include the connection between preschool and K-12 success, and the challenges and benefits of expanding access to preschool. Read his July 2005 op-ed in the Sacramento Bee.

 
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Economists

Rob Grunewald

Rob.Grunewald@mpls.frb.org
(612) 204-5000

Rob Grunewald is Economic Analyst for the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, for which he conducts regional economic research and co-authors the Minneapolis Fed’s report on current economic conditions. In 2004, he testified before the California Legislature about the economic benefits of preschool. He is co-author of an economic policy paper, Early Childhood Development: Economic Development with a High Public Return (January 2003). His areas of expertise include the economic benefits of quality preschool.

 

James Heckman

j-heckman@uchicago.edu
(773) 702-3478

James Heckman is a Nobel laureate in economics and the Henry Schultz Distinguished Service Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago. He is director of the University’s Economics Research Center and of its Center for Social Program Evaluation at the Harris School of Public Policy. His paper, Invest in the Very Young, argues for the economic returns of investing in quality preschool opportunity for all. His areas of expertise include the economic benefits of quality preschool.

 

 

Lynn Karoly

Lynn_Karoly@rand.org
Contact through RAND communications (310) 451-6913 or (703) 413-1100 x5117

Lynn Karoly is Director of Research Quality Assurance, Senior Economist and Professor of Economics at the RAND Graduate School. She is co-author of RAND’s 2005 report, The Economics of Investing in Universal Preschool Education in California, which projected a return of $2.62 for every public dollar invested in quality preschool. Her areas of expertise include the benefits of effective pre-k to the economy and the K-12 system.

 

Arthur Reynolds

areynolds@Waisman.Wisc.Edu
(608) 263-1847

Arthur Reynolds is a professor in the School of Social Work at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. He is the director of the ongoing Chicago Longitudinal Study (pdf), which traces 1,500 low-income children born in 1980 who participated in the Chicago Child-Parent Center preschool program. His areas of expertise include the educational and economic benefits of preschool.

 

Arthur Rolnick

art.rolnick@mpls.frb.org
(612) 204-5441

Arthur J. Rolnick is senior vice president and director of research at the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis and an associate economist with the Federal Open Market Committee. He has been a visiting professor of economics at Boston College, the University of Chicago, and the University of Minnesota. Most recently he was an adjunct professor of economics, MBA program, Lingnan College, Guangzhou, China and the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management. Recent papers include Early Childhood Development = Economic Development with a High Public Return. His areas of expertise include the economic benefits of effective pre-k.

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Business Supporters

Phil Halperin

phil@silvergiving.org

Phil Halperin is a former venture capitalist and president of the Silver Giving Foundation, a San Francisco-based philanthropy that supports children’s and education causes.

 

 

Russell Hammer

rhammer@lachamber.org
(213) 580-7525

Rusty Hammer is the former President and CEO of the 1400-member Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, which formally endorsed the Preschool for All initiative in July, 2005. He is also the former President and CEO of the Sacramento Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce and the former mayor of the city of Campbell, CA.

 


Jerri Hemsworth

Contact through Steve Cahn: scahn@calstrat.com
(310) 843-9600

Jerri Hemsworth is founder and creative director of Newman Grace, an advertising and graphic design firm in Woodland Hills. She is president of the National Association of Women Business Owners-California. Read her 2005 op-ed in the Los Angeles Daily News.

 

Al Jerome

Contact through Steve Cahn: scahn@calstrat.com
(310) 843-9600

Al Jerome is President and Chief Executive Officer of KCET, the public television station in Los Angeles. KCET produces two daily television series – “A Place of Our Own” and “Los Ninos en su Casa” – for parents and others who care for young children.

 


Beth Lowe

elowe@LOWEENTERPRISES.com

Beth Lowe is the former chair of the Los Angeles Universal Preschool (LAUP) Board of Directors. She is a former member of the First 5 LA Commission, which allocated $600 million over 6 years to insure access to preschool for all LA County 4-year-olds. She chaired for two terms the Los Angleles County Commission for Children and Families. In addition, Lowe is a former member and Chair of the State Child Development Policy Advisory Committee as well as past president of Children’s Institute International.

 
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Other Supporters

Lee Baca

Contact through Erica Derryck: ederryck@calfightcrime.org
(510) 836-2050

Lee Baca is Los Angeles County Sheriff, commanding the largest sheriff’s department in the United States. He is the Director of Homeland Security-Mutual Aid for California Region and manages four nonprofit Youth Athletic League Centers serving at-risk youth in after-school programs. He is a longtime advocate for effective early childhood education.

  

Sherry Lansing

info@sherrylansingfoundation.org
(510) 286-1670

Sherry Lansing is Chairman Emeritus of Viacom’s Paramount Pictures and a former teacher. She became the first female president of production for a Hollywood studio at 20th Century Fox Productions. She is a University of California regent and serves on the boards of Friends of Cancer Research, The University of Chicago, The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine and Teach for America. Lansing served on the exploratory committee for the Preschool for All ballot initiative.

 

 

Paul Orfalea

Contact through Lois Mitchell: lois@orfalea.org
(805) 565-7550

Paul Orfalea founded Kinko’s Inc. in 1970 and retired in the year 2000. The Orfalea Foundations focus on early care and education, caregiver training, learning differences and intergenerational programs, primarily in the Santa Barbara tri-county region. The foundation primarily supports child development facilities on college campuses, along with other children’s centers and programs for underprivileged youth. Orfalea also advocates on the importance for corporate responsibility by businesses to support “family-friendly” work/life policies including quality early care for children of working parents.

 

Camerino Sanchez

Contact through Erica Derryck: ederryck@calfightcrime.org
(510) 836-2050

Camerino Sanchez is Chief of Police in Santa Barbara and has served as Chief of Police in the cities of San Rafael and Hollister. He is immediate past president of the California Police Chief’s Association. He has also served with the Hispanic American Police Command Officers Association and the International Association of Chiefs of Police. Throughout his career, Chief Sanchez has pursued avenues for improving the lives of the youth in the communities in which he has served.

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Organizational Leaders

Catherine Atkin

catkin@preschoolcalifornia.org
Go through Michele Stillwell-Parvensky at (510) 271-0075 x317

Catherine Atkin is President of Preschool California. She is an attorney with legal and policy expertise in the area of early care and education and more than a decade of professional legislative and advocacy experience on domestic policy issues. Atkin worked as minority subcommittee counsel for the Banking and Financial Services Committee of the United States House of Representatives. Her areas of expertise include the California preschool landscape; teacher quality; education and economic benefits; and making the case for a “universal” preschool system in California. Read her February 2005 op-ed in the Fresno Bee.

 

Alice Huffman

alicehuffman@sbcglobal.net
(916) 498-1898

Alice Huffman is former President of the California chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) and serves on the organization’s Board of Directors in California. Huffman has served as president of the Black American Political Association of California and as former associate executive director of the California Teachers Association.

 

Janet Murguia

opi@nclr.org
By telephone contact Ellie Klerlein: (202) 776-1732

Janet Murguia is President and CEO of the National Council of La Raza, the largest national Latino civil rights and advocacy organization in the U.S. NCLR’s mission is to reduce poverty and discrimination and improve life opportunities for Hispanic Americans. She has served as Deputy Assistant to former President Clinton and as his deputy director of legislative affairs; Executive Vice Chancellor for University Relations at the University of Kansas; and legislative counsel to former Kansas Congressman Jim Slattery.

 

Diane Ujiiye

apiscandiane@sbcglobal.net
(310) 532-6111

Diane Ujiiye is Chair of the Asian and Pacific Islanders California Action Network. APIsCAN is a catalyst for public policy and community development that promotes health, social, economic, and political equity for the diverse Asian and Pacific Islander communities through organizing, collaboration, leadership development and education. Their 2005 legislative advocacy day included a focus on preschool opportunity. Ms. Ujiiye is also a member of the California Commission on API Affairs.


 

Karen Hill Scott

khs@karenhillscott.com
(310) 216-2928

Karen Hill Scott is President of the consulting firm Karen Hill-Scott & Company. She was the lead consultant to First 5 LA for the development of Universal Preschool in Los Angeles County. She chaired the California Legislature’s Master Plan subcommittee on school readiness, as well as the state superintendent’s 1998 Universal Preschool Taskforce. She sits on the board of the Foundation for Child Development. Her expertise includes teacher and program quality and the challenges of implementing large-scale programs on the local level.

 

Kris Perry

Contact through Elisa Bupara: ebupara@ccfc.ca.gov

Kris Perry is Executive Director of FIRST 5 California, the state agency that distributes a portion of the Prop. 10 tobacco tax funds for programs devoted to children from birth to age 5. She is former Executive Director of FIRST 5 San Mateo County, which committed significant funds to increase local access to quality preschool. Her areas of expertise include the benefits of preschool, and the challenges and rewards of expanding access at the local level.

 

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Please Contact: 

Deborah Kong
Director of Communications
(510) 271-0075 x314
(510) 847-5138 (cell)
dkong@preschoolcalifornia.org

or

Michele Stillwell-Parvensky 
Communications and Internet Advocacy Associate
(510) 271-0075 ext.317
mstillwellparvensky@
preschoolcalifornia.org

 

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