
Evidence Based Strategy
Talent Pipeline Management is essential for promoting kindergarten readiness because a strong, stable, and skilled early childhood education (ECE) workforce is the single greatest driver of quality in early learning programs. Decades of research confirm that the interactions children have with their teachers and caregivers including how they are taught, nurtured, and supported are the primary determinants of developmental and academic outcomes. Yet across the country, shortages in the ECE workforce are reaching crisis levels, threatening the accessibility, affordability, and quality of programs that prepare children for school success.
The ECE workforce faces systemic challenges, including chronically low wages, limited benefits, high turnover, and increasing credentialing requirements without parallel investments in compensation or advancement pathways. These barriers not only discourage new entrants into the field but also force many experienced educators to leave for higher-paying jobs in K–12 or other sectors. Because the workforce is predominantly female and disproportionately composed of women of color, these conditions reinforce inequities while undermining stability in the sector. As a result, children are less likely to benefit from consistent, high-quality relationships with educators. Such relationships are crucial for language development, social-emotional growth, and ultimately kindergarten readiness.
Talent Pipeline Management directly addresses these challenges by building intentional systems to attract, develop, and retain skilled early educators. Effective talent pipeline management strategies start with data-driven workforce planning which means identifying current and projected staffing needs, turnover trends, and priority areas for investment. They then layer in recruitment strategies to attract diverse candidates, professional development and credentialing opportunities to ensure educators can meet high standards, and compensation reforms to reduce turnover and incentivize retention. By creating supportive work environments that offer clear career ladders, fair pay, and ongoing training, talent pipeline management strengthens the stability and capacity of the workforce.
For children and families, the benefits are immediate and long-term. Strong talent pipeline management ensures that classrooms are staffed with qualified, consistent, and motivated educators who can deliver the high-quality instruction and care necessary for school readiness. For communities and states, talent pipeline management builds a sustainable workforce pipeline that matches demand for early childhood programs, reduces disruptions for families, and creates pathways for economic mobility within a historically undervalued profession. By investing in talent pipeline management, stakeholders are investing not only in the well-being of early educators but also in the kindergarten readiness and lifelong success of the children they serve.
A growing body of evidence underscores the importance of early educator workforce strategies for improving kindergarten readiness. The Institute of Medicine and National Research Council conclude that the ECE workforce is the single most important determinant of program quality and, by extension, child outcomes. High-quality interactions between teachers and children are linked to stronger language development, literacy, and socio-emotional skills, all critical predictors of kindergarten success
Research from the Center for the Study of Child Care Employment (CSCCE) highlights the severity of the workforce crisis: early educators are among the lowest-paid professionals in the United States, with median wages that often fall below a living wage. This economic instability drives turnover rates exceeding 30% in many communities, directly impacting program quality and disrupting children’s continuity of care. High turnover weakens the teacher-child relationships that are foundational for children’s learning and adjustment to kindergarten.
Evidence also shows that targeted investments in recruitment, retention, and professional development can strengthen both the workforce and child outcomes. For example, North Carolina’s WAGE$ program provides salary supplements tied to education levels, reducing turnover and encouraging educators to pursue further training. Evaluations demonstrate that such compensation strategies increase workforce stability, which in turn improves classroom quality and kindergarten readiness outcomes.
Professional development is another critical component of talent pipeline management. The National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER) finds that when early educators receive practice-based coaching, ongoing training, and access to higher education, they implement stronger instructional practices that improve children’s early literacy and math skills. These supports are most effective when embedded within career pathways that lead to recognized credentials and degrees, ensuring professional growth aligns with higher standards of quality.
Together, this evidence base affirms that workforce-focused strategies are critical levers for improving program quality and boosting kindergarten readiness. Without systemic talent pipeline management, communities risk perpetuating shortages, inequities, and instability that undermine outcomes for children.
For Talent Pipeline Management to succeed in improving kindergarten readiness, several enabling conditions must be in place:
Sustainable Funding
Cross-Sector Partnerships
Data-Driven Planning
Career Pathways and Credentialing
Compensation and Benefits Reform
Supportive Work Environments
Continuous Improvement
Track both early signals and long-term outcomes.
Access to and participation in high-quality early care and education (ECE) is a critical leading indicator of kindergarten readiness. Research in the United States shows that ECE participation supports the development of foundational skills in literacy, numeracy, self-regulation, and social interaction. In Kentucky, 2023 data confirm this connection, children enrolled in state-funded preschool or Head Start were more likely to be rated as “ready” for kindergarten on the state’s readiness screener compared to their peers who did not attend formal ECE programs.
To measure access and participation, Kentucky tracks the number and percentage of eligible children enrolled in three key programs: state-funded preschool, Head Start, and the Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP). These metrics capture both reach (how many children are served) and equity (how participation compares to the eligible population at state and local levels). Additionally, the average per-child cost of quality ECE, calculated at 160% of the federal poverty level, provides context for affordability, a major factor influencing access.
Monitoring these indicators helps policymakers, educators, and advocates identify gaps in enrollment, address barriers for underserved families, and target investments to ensure all Kentucky children can benefit from high-quality early learning experiences that set the stage for future success.
Quality in early care and education (ECE) is a leading indicator of kindergarten readiness because children benefit most when their early learning experiences go beyond basic health and safety to provide rich, developmentally appropriate instruction and support. High-quality ECE fosters stronger cognitive, social-emotional, and language skills, which are critical for school success.
Quality encompasses multiple dimensions, including nurturing educator-child relationships, evidence-based curricula, and well-prepared, professionally supported educators. In Kentucky, the KY ALL STARS Quality Rating and Improvement System evaluates these dimensions across four domains: classroom and instructional quality, staff qualifications and professional development, family and community engagement, and administrative and leadership practices. Higher ratings reflect alignment with Kentucky’s Early Childhood Standards, strong family partnerships, continuous improvement systems, and robust educator supports.
In 2023, fewer than half of Kentucky’s licensed and regulated ECE providers were rated high-quality (3 stars or higher), with a statewide average of 2.7 stars. Indicators used to track quality include the percentage of high-quality providers, the share of communities with average ratings of 3 or better, the proportion of early childhood slots in high-quality settings, staff-to-child ratios, and health and wellness referrals. Improving these metrics strengthens early learning environments and better equips children for success in kindergarten and beyond.
A high-quality early care and education (ECE) workforce is a cornerstone of kindergarten readiness. Skilled, well-supported educators create nurturing, engaging, and developmentally appropriate environments that foster children’s cognitive, social-emotional, and physical growth. Key components of a strong ECE workforce include formal education and ongoing professional training, recognized credentials and career pathways, deep knowledge of child development, cultural competence, and the ability to build strong relationships with children and families. Educators must also demonstrate socio-emotional competence, uphold high health and safety standards, and engage in advocacy and leadership for the profession.
Investing in the ECE workforce through professional development, scholarships, competitive compensation, and supportive working conditions helps recruit and retain talented educators committed to children’s success. In turn, children benefit from consistent, high-quality interactions that build the skills needed for school and life.
Kentucky tracks workforce quality through indicators such as the number of ECE-specific degrees and credentials earned, the number of scholarships awarded to educators and directors, the number of teacher leads and assistants, staff turnover rates, and the proportion of early educators trained in early literacy. Strengthening these metrics ensures that more children enter kindergarten with a solid foundation for learning, setting them on a path toward lifelong achievement.
Third grade proficiency in reading and math is a critical lagging indicator for kindergarten readiness, reflecting the long-term impact of early learning experiences on academic achievement. Students who enter kindergarten ready to learn are significantly more likely to reach proficiency or higher on third grade state assessments. In Kentucky, data from the Brigance Kindergarten Screener shows a strong correlation: children rated as “ready” or “ready with enrichments” in kindergarten consistently outperform their peers in third grade reading and math, while those not ready are more likely to score at the novice or apprentice levels.
This relationship matters because third grade marks a pivotal shift from “learning to read” to “reading to learn,” a transition that affects success across all subjects. Proficiency at this stage predicts future academic achievement, including middle and high school performance, graduation rates, and postsecondary readiness. Conversely, children who are not proficient by third grade face increased risks of grade retention, remedial coursework, and lower educational attainment.
As a lagging indicator, third grade proficiency captures the cumulative effects of children’s early environments, access to quality early care and education, and kindergarten readiness. It is an essential measure for evaluating the effectiveness of early childhood investments and identifying where supports are needed.