Abbott Ex Rel. Abbott v. Burke

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

PORITZ, C.J.

Nineteen months ago, this Court accepted the commitment made by the Commissioner of Education to undertake, in good faith, broad-based educational reform in New Jersey’s poor, urban school districts (the “Abbott districts”). Abbott v. Burke, 153 N.J. 480, 710 A.2d 450 (1998) (Abbott V). In reliance on the Legislature’s “clear recognition of the need for comprehensive substantive educational programs and standards,” and on the Commissioner’s proposals for reform, we stated our expectation that twenty-eight years of “major judicial involvement” in this extraordinary effort should end. Id. at 490, 710 A.2d 450.

Yet, once again, we find that we must address issues we thought settled. By motion in aid of litigants’ rights, plaintiffs in Abbott V have returned to the Court. They ask us to order defendants to “implement forthwith [the] well-planned, high-quality preschool education” promised by the Commissioner during the hearings in Abbott V; “provide such facilities and ... adequate funding as necessary” to implement the required preschool programs; and “designate] a Superior Court Judge to supervise” implementation and “adjudicate ... systemic issues arising [from] non-compliance with ... Abbott V.” At the heart of their request for relief is a claim that the Commissioner has repudiated his promise to provide quality preschool education for the disadvantaged school children who reside in the Abbott districts. In support of their claim, plaintiffs allege systemic failures that only the Court can address.

We reject plaintiffs’ contention that the Commissioner has backed away from his efforts to reform education in the Abbott districts, or that his alleged non-compliance with Abbott V demonstrates bad faith. We are satisfied that any discrepancies in the *101implementation of our decree have resulted from misunderstandings in executing the Court’s mandate. We are, however, convinced that the manner in which the Department of Education (DOE) has carried out the preschool mandate of Abbott V is not consistent with the Commissioner’s representations to the remand court in that case. We conclude that the DOE’s use of community care providers staffed by uncertified teachers and governed by Department of Human Services (DHS) daycare standards violates the Abbott V requirement to establish quality preschool programs for three- and four-year old children. Our intervention is warranted now to assure that the implementation of preschool in the Abbott districts is faithful to the programs proposed by the Commissioner and accepted by this Court less than two years ago.1

I

Abbott V was grounded in “a top-to-bottom commitment to ensuring that the [promised] reforms [would be] conscientiously undertaken and vigorously carried forward.” Abbott V, supra, 153 N.J. at 528, 710 A.2d 450. The task was, and is, enormous. In effect, a major transformation in the educational system servicing the State’s poor, urban districts has been authorized by the Legislature, advanced by the executive branch, and affirmed by the Court. It is not surprising that the road has been rough, or that progress has been slower than the parties had hoped it would be. There is, indeed, general acknowledgment among the parties and amici that the time frame established by the Court for *102implementing preschool programs in all of the Abbott schools by the 1999-2000 school year was difficult to meet.

By the same token, another generation of children will pay the price for each year of delay. The record in Abbott V overwhelmingly demonstrated that substantive, quality early-childhood education does make a difference, and that poor urban youngsters do better academically when they have participated in enriched preschool programs from an early age. Our Constitution requires a thorough and efficient educatiomfor all of our children because we believe that educated citizens are better able to participate fully in the economic and communal life of the society in which we all live. Quality preschool, whole school reform, adequate, secure school buildings in which to learn, health and social services, and other programs as needed — those are the elements of a commitment made to the Abbott children, to their future.

The momentum for reform must not slow. In Abbott V we made certain assumptions about the proposals before us. It is appropriate now for us to clarify those assumptions in order to provide further guidance for the implementation of preschool programs in the Abbott districts.

The Court’s intent in Abbott V was expressed in the first paragraph of its opinion:

Our Constitution mandates that the “Legislature shall provide for the maintenance and support of a thorough and efficient system of free public schools for the instruction of all the children in the State between the ages of five and eighteen years.” N.J. Const, art. VIII, § 4, ¶ 1. This decision explains the remedial measures that must be implemented in order to ensure that public school children from the poorest urban communities receive the educational entitlements that the Constitution guarantees them.
[Abbott V, supra, 153 N.J. at 489, 710 A.2d 450.]

The genesis of the remedial measures endorsed by the Court in Abbott V lay in the remand proceedings ordered a year earlier in Abbott v. Burke, 149 N.J. 145, 693 A.2d 417 (1997) (Abbott IV). In Abbott IV, we reaffirmed our earlier direction “that the State address special education needs by determining and implementing ... supplemental programs essential to relieve students in the *103speeial needs districts [SNDs] of their unique disadvantages.” Id. at 189-90, 693 A.2d 417. Because the scope and content of appropriate programs for at-risk children lies “squarely within the special expertise of educators,” id. at 199, 693 A.2d 417, we remanded the matter to the Superior Court to conduct proceedings designed to identify both supplemental program and capital facility needs. Id. at 199-200, 693 A.2d 417.

The proceedings that followed are described in considerable detail in the report of Judge King, a Presiding Judge of the Appellate Division temporarily assigned to oversee the remand, Abbott V, Appendix I, 153 N.J. at 529, 710 A.2d 450, and in the Court’s opinion in Abbott V, supra, 153 N.J. at 493, 710 A.2d 450. It bears repeating, however, that educators with substantial credentials 2 participated in seventeen days of hearings that focused on reports submitted by the Commissioner and the plaintiffs, and that a highly-qualified, court-appointed expert, Dr. Allan Odden,3 assisted Judge King and submitted his own report on supplemental program and facilities issues. Abbott V, Appendix II, 153 N.J. at 636, 710 A.2d 450. After reviewing Judge King’s recommendations and the extensive record of expert testimony and research results developed on remand, this Court, in large measure, adopted the Commissioner’s proposals.

*104Most relevant to plaintiffs’ motion, the Court found that the Legislature had recognized the need for “early childhood education for three- and four-year olds in the poorest school districts.” Abbott V, supra, 153 N.J. at 505, 710 A.2d 450 (discussing Comprehensive Educational Improvement and Financing Act of 1996 (CEIFA), specifically N.J.S.A. 18A:7F-16). Based on the funding formula found at N.J.S.A. 18A:7F-16, the Commissioner’s authority as delineated in N.J.S.A. 18A:7F-6b, and the administrative regulation implementing CEIFA, N.J.A.C. 6:19-3.2d, “[t]he Court directed] the Commissioner to exercise his power ... to require all Abbott districts to provide half-day pre-school for three- and four-year olds.” Abbott V, supra, 153 N.J. at 508, 710 A.2d 450. We said further:

[T]he Commissioner must ensure that such programs are adequately funded and [must] assist the schools in meeting the need for transportation and other services, support, and resources related to such programs. The Commissioner may authorize cooperation with or the use of existing early childhood and day-care programs in the community.
[Ibid.]

It is the scope and content of our direction in Abbott V that requires further discussion in this opinion.

II

We begin with plaintiffs’ general contention that “the State has gravely defaulted on its commitment” to implement “well-planned, high quality preschool education for all Abbott children.” Plaintiffs focus on such quality indicators as substantive educational programming guided by DOE standards, as well as other indicators understood to affect quality including, inter alia, class size, teacher certification, and supplemental program needs, all funded at the levels requested by the SNDs. We will speak to these concerns separately; however, some comments about quality preschool education are warranted.

The testimony of numerous educators, the reports submitted by the parties and by Dr. Odden, and the recommendations of Judge King confirm a core understanding that the needs of at-risk *105children can be met only by quality preschool programs.4 By way of example, Dr. Odden, who had recommended full-day programs for three- and four-year olds, stressed the “large positive benefits” that would result:

Research is very clear that high quality, preschool programs for students from low income backgrounds have discernible, positive, and significant impacts on student academic achievement in the early academic years____
[Abbott V, App. II, supra, 153 N.J. at 648, 710 A.2d 450 (emphasis added).]

Abbott V, quoting the Commissioner, emphasized these points:

As the Commissioner’s research itself demonstrates: “Well-planned, high quality half-day preschool programs ... help close the gap between the home and school environments and the educational expectations that lead to academic success.”
[Abbott V, supra, 153 N.J. at 503, 710 A.2d 450 (alteration in original)(emphasis added).]

The disagreement, then, is not about the need for quality preschool education; as is too often the case in such matters, the disagreement is about the program components that constitute quality preschool education. In Abbott V, we relied heavily on the specific proposals put forward by the Commissioner and his experts without describing them in detail. We do so now because the programs that have been implemented do not conform to the proposals that were accepted by the Court.

A. Substantive Standards

Plaintiffs and amici allege that the Commissioner has not established substantive standards describing the educational content of preschool programs. Without core curriculum standards akin to those developed by the DOE for grade schools but specific to preschool levels, disadvantaged children in the Abbott districts will get little more than daycare. This nomenclature is critical. The distinction between “daycare,” which does not generally provide structured, educational programming geared toward school-*106readiness skill development, and “preschool” or “preschool education,” which is intended to prepare children for success in elementary school, lies at the core of this case. In order for disadvantaged children to develop the language skills and discipline they need for later academic success, there must be educational content to their preschool experience.

The record is sparse on this subject. Under regulations adopted by the DOE on September 1,1999,

districts are required to provide developmentally appropriate programs, under the supervision of master teachers, for the 1999-2000 school year, and the Department will provide districts, by the 2000-2001 school year, with specific guidance on developmentally appropriate standards/expeetations to provide uniform quality.
[W./.A.C 6:19A-3.1.]

N.J.A.C. 6:19A-3.3(d) deals with master teachers, who are to “coordinate and facilitate early childhood programs and assist in the provision of early childhood professional development.” Each district is expected to provide one master teacher for every twenty preschool classrooms. Where the districts contract with DHS-licensed child care providers, see infra at 128, 748 A.2d at 100, it is the master teacher who is expected to assist the providers in the development of programming “aligned with the Core Curriculum Content Standards and ... integrated with the [Whole School Reform] model(s), or the whole school alternative program design(s) utilized in the district ....” N.J.AC. 6:19A-3.3(b)(2).

The intent of these provisions, as stated by the Commissioner, is to “establish uniform standards for early childhood programs that emphasize articulation with whole school reform programs and Core Curriculum Content Standards.” We are also informed that the DOE has hired Dr. Robert Slavin, co-director of the Center for Research on the Education of Students Placed at Risk, to assist in the development of a preschool curriculum to complement the Success For All (SFA) program discussed in Abbott V. In three districts there already exists a “Curiosity Corner” pilot that *107accomplishes this goal. Similarly, some districts are using other models described in Abbott V, such as the High Scope/Perry Preschool program and the Abecedarian model.

We understand that the Commissioner has established Rapid Intervention Teams to work with the districts to oversee both the opening of preschool programs and to assist daycare providers in “molding together, both fiscally and programmatically, two very different systems.” Such staff assistance cannot substitute for substantive standards promulgated by the Commissioner. Although the DOE has promised to adopt standards by the 2000-2001 school year, more concrete guidance for this school year would have been preferable. Without adequate standards the DOE will be unable to evaluate preschool programs or to prevent the development of a two-tiered system in which one group of children is offered daycare and another group is offered high-quality preschool. We take notice of draft standards now under review by educators around the state. See http://www.state.nj.us/ njed/eee. It is reported that the DOE anticipates a final document shortly.

Substantive educational guidance for all Abbott district preschool programs is an essential component of DOE’s commitment to the Abbott districts and must be adopted by April 17, 2000, so that the districts will be able to prepare for the 2000-2001 school year.

B. Other Elements of Quality Preschools

1. Certification

Plaintiffs, joined by the New Jersey Education Association and the Association for Children of New Jersey (ACNJ), also contend that the teacher certification standards set out at N.J.AC. 6:19A-3.3 will not guarantee high-quality preschool. The ACNJ points to N.J AC. 6:19A-3.3(b)(4)(ii), under which DHS-licensed daycare providers can hire new teachers holding only a two year *108associate’s degree5 and not a bachelor’s degree. They explain that the Commissioner promised certified teachers, but that the new regulations permit the hiring of non-qualified staff. Likewise, the ACNJ has expressed its concern that even the associate’s degree may be waived under section 3.3(c) of the DOE regulations, a provision that the ACNJ claims is so vague it will undermine the certification requirements entirely.

In the Abbott TV remand proceedings the State proposed “one teacher and one aide for each half-day preschool class.” Abbott V, App. I, supra, 153 N.J. at 559, 710 A.2d 450. The estimated budget at “$51,000 per teacher,” ibid., suggests that certified teachers were contemplated. Judge King observed that the State’s specific “recommendations and budgets for preschool ... were consistent with ... legislative requirements,” that anticipated certified teachers. Abbott V, App. I, supra, 153 N.J. at 560, 710 A.2d 450. There was also, during the remand, some discussion of specialized credentials for preschool teachers. Dr. Barnett, testifying for the plaintiffs, supported the establishment of new teacher credentials geared toward the education of children under six. At no point was it suggested that the then-existing regulations requiring a certificate, N.J.AC. 6:ll-31(a), with an elementary endorsement, N.J.AC. 6:ll-6.2(a)(6) (described as “authorizing] the holder to serve as elementary school teacher in grades nursery through eight in all public schools”), would not pertain to all preschool programs in the SNDs. In short, the testimony contemplated, and the Court understood, that the Abbott preschool programs would be staffed by certified teachers.

Teacher certification is unquestionably an important component of any preschool education program. See, e.g., Abbott V, App. II, supra, 153 N.J. at 651, 710 A.2d 450 (explaining that teachers, not instructional aides, are catalysts for improved student perfor-*109manee). Abbott V assumed teachers capable of providing high-quality programs to at-risk children, i.e., certified teachers as then required by DOE regulations. Indeed, the DOE has recognized the link between quality preschool and qualified staff. The Department has proposed a new preschool-3 certificate, referenced at N.J.A.C. 6:19A-3.3(b). Under this regulation, existing teachers employed by DHS-licensed providers are given time to obtain both a bachelors’ degree and the new certification, even though N.J.AC. 6:11-3.11 states that all teachers, with the exception of vocational teachers, are required to hold a baccalaureate degree. DOE permits those teachers to:

i. Work toward a bachelor’s degree in six years and the proposed preschool-3 certificate, if the teacher already has Child Development Associate (CDA) or Certified Childcare Professional (CCP) credentials; 6 or
ii. Enroll in a CDA/CCP program, attain CDA/CCP credentials within two years and work toward an associate’s degree in early childhood and a bachelor’s degree within six years and the proposed preschool-3 certification, if the teacher does not have a CDA/CCP or any degree____
[NJ.A.C. 6:19A-3.3(b)(3).]

Likewise, the requirements for newly hired teachers employed by DHS-licensed providers are also relaxed. Those teachers must either:

i. Have a bachelor’s degree, enroll in the Department’s provisional teacher program and obtain appropriate early childhood education courses, and obtain the proposed preschool-3 teacher certification by September 2001;
ii. Have an associate’s degree in early childhood education and enroll in a bachelor’s degree program that would lead to a teacher certification in early childhood education by September 2004; or
iii. Have a K-8 teacher’s certificate, enroll in early childhood courses now, and seek the proposed preschool-3 certificate as soon as it becomes available----
[N.J.AC. 6:19A-3.3(b)(4).]

Finally, under the new regulations, a school board may request a waiver from the Department if the board seeks to contract with a DHS-licensed facility that cannot meet the requirements for new *110hires, but nonetheless agrees to hire teachers with CDA/CDP credentials. N.J.A.C. 6:19A-3.3(c). As a prerequisite for invoking waiver, a board must demonstrate that “teachers with a bachelor’s degree or an associate’s degree in early childhood education are not available.” Ibid.

We recognized in Abbott V that “cooperation with or the use of existing early childhood and day-care programs in the community” would likely be both necessary and appropriate. Abbott V, supra, 153 N.J. at 508, 710 A.2d 450. Dr. Barnett, plaintiffs’ expert, testified that “there are resources in these communities that schools ought to work eollaboratively with ... and ... that there are already facilities out there .... ” As a practical matter, given the time constraints within which the districts were required to develop half-day programs for three- and four-year olds, use of operating daycare centers has obvious benefits — existing facilities and staff, links to the community, and wrap-around daycare for working parents, among others.

As plaintiffs and various amici point out, however, existing DHS-licensed daycare programs do not require certified teachers. N.J.AC. 10:122-4.3, -4.6. Many daycare teachers have extensive experience working with young children, but do not hold the necessary credentials to continue in their jobs should certification now be required. Although the new regulation is unclear about the precise time frame in specific circumstances, existing teachers in daycare programs are allowed a substantial amount of time to obtain a baccalaureate degree and to become certified. It appears that both persons who already hold college credits and persons who hold no college credits at all have six years to obtain a college degree. It is also not clear whether someone who does not possess either CDA or CCP credentials has six years or eight years to obtain a bachelor’s degree and a presehool-3 certificate. See N.J.AC. 6:19A-3.3(b)(3)(i)(ii). Moreover, daycare providers are permitted to hire new teachers with two-year associate’s degrees and without any certification. New hires with only an associate’s degree are given until 2004 to obtain a bachelor’s *111degree and teaching certificate. See N.J.A.C. 6:19A-3.3(b)(4)(i)(ii). Assuming that the district-run schools are held to the more stringent requirements of N.J.A.C. 6:11-3.1 et seq., it appears that the DOE has created the two-tiered system ACNJ fears. Under this system, district-run schools will have qualified teachers; DHS-licensed providers will not. Indeed, a broad interpretation of the waiver provision would permit DHS-licensed providers to hire minimally qualified teachers.

If teachers now employed by daycare centers are not given time to obtain their bachelor’s degrees they will lose their jobs. Yet, without qualified teachers, the children will lose the opportunity that well-run, substantive preschool programs offer. Reasonable but limited time frames are consistent with the goal of providing qualified teachers as soon as practicable. The DOE’s regulations delay for too long staffing every preschool classroom with a fully qualified teacher. The regulations must be clarified and the time frames shortened in order to eliminate as quickly as possible any disparity between district-run and DHS-licensed preschool programs. Certainly, existing, uncertified preschool teachers must be required to demonstrate that they are proceeding toward their degrees and preschool-3 certificates.7 Under the present regulation, an unqualified person could remain in a teaching position for up to six years without making any progress in obtaining the necessary credentials. Existing teachers who have experience working with young children but who otherwise lack academic credentials should be given four years to obtain certification and should be evaluated each year to determine whether they will be retained. This approach effects a reasonable compromise during this transition period. New teachers, however, must be *112college graduates and should have until September 2001 to obtain the proposed presehool-3 certificate. The September 2001 deadline is consistent with the timely implementation of quality preschool envisioned by Abbott V. See N.J.AC. 6:19A-3.3(b)(4)(i).

Submissions by the parties suggest that there is currently a shortage of certified teachers, but the motion record does not inform us fully about the nature or extent of any such shortage. We share ACNJ’s concern that N.J.AC. 6:19A-3.3(c), the waiver provision, does not provide sufficient guidance for schools attempting to demonstrate that certified teachers cannot be found. Clear standards should be developed, setting forth the showing that must be made .before waivers are granted (e.g., that advertisements were placed, that colleges were contacted, etc.). Furthermore, waivers should be limited to one year unless a subsequent similar showing is made. If certified teachers cannot be found for preschool, we anticipate that increased efforts and further coordination with New Jersey’s higher educational institutions will be necessary.

2. Class Size

The State’s plan as submitted to Judge King set preschool class size at a 1:15 teaeher-to-student ratio. Abbott V, App. I, supra, 153 N.J. at 558, 710 A.2d 450. That recommendation was based on research demonstrating that enriched programs at the preschool level “reduce[ ] the chances that disadvantaged children will be retained or assigned to special education in the early grades.” Ibid. The plaintiffs contended that the State’s proposal did not go far enough and advocated class sizes even smaller than fifteen students per teacher. Abbott V, App. I, supra, 153 N.J. at 578, 710 A.2d 450.

Although Judge King made certain alterations to the Department’s model in his recommendations to the Court, class size was not mentioned in connection with preschool. Abbott V, App. I, supra, 153 N.J. at 609-10, 710 A.2d 450 (discussing need to reduce class sizes at various grade levels). In Abbott V, the Court *113likewise did not specifically discuss class size for preschoolers, relying instead on the representations and testimony during the remand hearings and in the Commissioner’s report. Dr. Barbara Anderson, Assistant Commissioner for the Division of Student Services at DOE, testified that the Commissioner recommended a preschool class size of fifteen students with one teacher and one aide. The Assistant Commissioner for Finance at DOE testified that he had prepared cost estimates by assuming preschool classes would have a 1:15 teacher-to-student ratio. DOE hired the Vitetta Group, an architectural and engineering consulting firm, to assess facilities needs in the twenty-eight SNDs. Abbott V, App. I, supra, 153 N.J. at 615, 710 A.2d 450. In making its calculations and recommendations, the Vitetta Group assumed that each preschool class would consist of a maximum of fifteen students. Id. at 618, 710 A.2d 450. It is certainly fair then to assume that the State intended to implement a 1:15 teacher-to-student ratio.

The new regulations adopted by the DOE subsequent to the Court’s decision in Abbott V addressed the issue of class size. N.J.A.C. 6:19A-3.3(b) states:

The board shall contract with a DHS-licensed child care provider to provide services to preschool students during the 1999-2000 school year when that provider agrees to meet the following standards:
1. Provide one teacher and one aide for every 15 students, or one teacher and two aides for every 20 students____

Even if we assume that the DOE experts were describing a “model” program for the implementation of high-quality preschool, as the State now claims, that model became the basis for the Court’s decision in Abbott V. That model clearly called for small classes headed by a qualified teacher, and not one teacher and two aides for every twenty students as permitted by the Department’s new regulation. We observe that in Dr. Odden’s report to Judge King, the Special Master cited to the results of two separate academic studies finding that the addition of “an instructional aide in a regular classroom produces little if any achievement effect.” Abbott V, App. II, supra, 153 N.J. at 651, 710 A.2d 450. The *114model proposed by the Commissioner is supported in the research literature he referenced.

We reaffirm the requirement of one certified teacher for every fifteen preschool children.

C. Daycare Provider Contracts

During the Abbott IV remand proceedings both plaintiffs and the State recommended collaboration between the districts and existing community daycare programs. The parties recognized that a readily-available source of staff and facilities could be found in the DHS-licensed programs then operating in the Abbott districts. In Abbott V the Court understood the need for collaboration and explicitly authorized the use of community based programs. Abbott V, supra, 153 N.J. at 508, 710 A.2d 450.

Following Abbott V, in February 1999, Assistant Commissioner Barbara Anderson sent letters to the SNDs asking for revisions to the 1999-2000 early childhood program plans that had been submitted to the DOE to implement the Court’s decision. The Assistant Commissioner informed the districts that they must “collaborate with local ... DHS ... licensed child care providers and [must] use those providers whenever practical to implement required preschool programs.” The districts were also told that “[duplication of programs or records otherwise available in the community [was] prohibited” and that they could “rely upon the DHS licensure requirements as sufficient to ensure an appropriate level of quality for these programs ...” The DHS regulations, however, are designed to provide for supervision of small children in a daycare setting, see N.J.AC. 10:122-1.2(a); they are not designed to provide a preschool educational experience that prepares disadvantaged children to achieve academically in school.

Subsequently, the DOE adopted N.J.A.C. 6:19A-3.3, which states:

The board shall cooperate with or utilize a DHS-licensed child care provider whenever practical to implement required preschool programs and shall not duplicate programs or services otherwise available in the community. When the *115board enters into a contract with a DHS-lieensed child care provider for the 2000-2001 school year, the contract shall be in a form provided by or approved by the Department. The board shall contract with a DHS-licensed child care provider to provide services to preschool students during the 1999-2000 school year when that provider agrees to meet [guidelines relating to teacher-to-student ratio, teacher qualification, supplemental programs, master teachers, and family workers].
[N.J.A.C. 6:19A-3.3(b).]

By its terms, the regulation permits exceptions to collaboration with DHS providers only upon a showing that cooperation with a particular provider is impractical.

Subject to the conditions imposed by the Court in this opinion, the use of daycare providers “whenever practical” comports with Abbott V for all of the reasons previously advanced, see supra at 102, 748 A.2d at 87-88. Not to use those resources would make no sense, especially when the need is so great and the time frames for implementation so short. The Assistant Commissioner for Legal and Regulatory Affairs has certified that the “DHS has made a substantial financial investment in child care services,” including the allocation of $170 million in Fiscal Year 1999 and -$200 million in Fiscal Year 2000. We are confident that, when revised to comport with this opinion, the new regulations and the substantive standards to be developed by the DOE will establish a baseline for upgrading daycare centers into well-run preschools. When an existing daycare center is unable or unwilling to comply with those requirements, cooperation with that center would be presumptively not “practical” under N.J.AC. 6:19A-3.3(b).

We also note that direct district operation of a program means district responsibility for quality and ensures accountability within the district administrative structure. Contracts between the districts and daycare providers raise questions about responsibility and accountability that are not answered on the record before us. N.J AC. 6:19A-3.3(b) states that “the contract shall be in a form provided by or approved by the Department,” but no form of contract has been provided to the Court.

*116We agree with the ACNJ that contractual agreements with DHS-licensed providers must “include clear expectations, necessary supports and accountability measures.” Only by delineating the specific responsibilities of the district and the provider, can there be evaluation and accountability based on the specific tasks assigned to each. Ultimately, it is the district that must have the power to assess and evaluate providers and to impose improvements if necessary. Termination of the contract by the district must be an option when the provider cannot or will not adhere to quality standards. On the other side, the support to be provided by the district is also critical, whether in the form of supervision, professional development, access to specialized staff, or assistance in complying with federal and state requirements for special education, bilingual education, and other needed services. Ultimately, it is the responsibility of the districts and the DOE to monitor operating preschools on a regular basis and to ensure that they are delivering quality programs. Contracts between the districts and providers must spell out these and other requirements deemed appropriate by the Commissioner.

The DOE has excluded Head Start, an existing federally-funded program, from district enrollment projections based on the assumption that Head Start will continue to serve district children in the next school year. Head Start programs, however, present unique issues. As high-quality daycare, Head Start offers substantial opportunities for disadvantaged children. State preschool standards are, however, more demanding than Head Start program standards. See, e.g., 42 U.S.C.A. § 9843a (requiring that merely fifty percent of teachers have advanced degrees); 45 C.F.R. § 1304.21 (providing loose content standards); 45 C.F.R. § 1306.32 (allowing twenty students per class). The districts can exclude Head Start children from their preschool enrollment projections only when it can be demonstrated that the excluded children attend Head Start programs that meet DOE standards. The NAACP also alleges that children are not allowed to attend Head Start programs if their parents drop out of a required *117Temporary Aid for Needy Families program. Preschool programs are for all Abbott district children — no child may be excluded from a preschool program that is part of a district plan because of parental status.

D. Facilities and Supplemental Program Funding

In Abbott V we addressed preschool funding:

If any Abbott schools are able to obtain the space, supplies, teaching faculty, staff, and means of transportation that are necessary to implement these programs for the 1998-1999 school year, they should be supplied with the necessary funding to enable them to do so. The Commissioner shall ensure that all other Abbott schools shall have the resources and additional funds that are necessary to implement preschool education by the commencement of the 1999-2000 school year.
[Abbott V, 153 N.J. at 508, 710 A.2d 450.]

Plaintiffs and amici specifically the cities of Asbury Park, Elizabeth, and Passaic, allege that the State has failed to comply with the Abbott V mandate because DOE has denied funding for preschool facilities improvements. It is also alleged that the districts’ requests for supplemental programs and transportation funding have been uniformly rejected by the DOE, again in contravention of Abbott V.

In February 1999 Assistant Commissioner Barbara Anderson sent a form letter to the districts denying their supplemental funding requests and advising that such requests should not be submitted as part of the districts’ operational plans, but rather through a separate specified process. It appears that prior to this point the districts had received little by way of instruction from the DOE about supplemental funding applications. The lack of early guidance from the DOE resulted in submissions the DOE then deemed unsatisfactory and this, in turn, caused frustration with the supplemental funding process.

The Agency’s decision to deal with district operational plans separately from supplemental programs is no doubt within the agency’s prerogatives. The DOE asserts that supplemental requests are being approved and funded under its procedures, as are requests for temporary facilities when they are needed. These *118matters are precisely the type of fact-sensitive disputes that the Office of Administrative Law (OAL) is prepared to handle. We cannot decide them here without a record, nor should we. Nonetheless, we cannot ignore the DOE’s form-letter response to the districts’ requests, and caution that reasonable requests to fund supplemental programs must be handled fairly and quickly.

Abbott V held that “even though it is not feasible at this time to ascertain or mandate a specific funding level, adequate funding remains critical to the achievement of a thorough and efficient education.” Abbott V, supra, 153 N.J. at 517-18, 710 A.2d 450. We also said that “the Commissioner may, before seeking new appropriations, first determine whether funds within an existing school budget are sufficient to meet a school’s request for a demonstrably needed supplemental program.” Id. at 518, 710 A.2d 450. The Commissioner indicates that he sought and obtained 37 million dollars in supplemental funding for the 1999-2000 school year and that if there is a need for additional monies during the course of the school year he will entertain applications from the districts at any time in accordance with the DOE’s regulations. The DHS has made available approximately $12 million dollars to child care centers for facility expansion, renovation, equipment, and supplies. Only after a review of individual applications from the districts can it be determined whether “adequate funding ... critical to the achievement of a thorough and efficient education” has been provided. We urge the Commissioner to work with the districts to resolve funding issues expeditiously; when an amicable resolution is not possible, decision making must occur early enough in the school year to allow programs to be implemented by the next school year. See infra at 119, 748 A.2d at 95.

E. Community Outreach

There is apparently some misunderstanding about the DOE requirement that the districts plan for seventy-five percent of their anticipated preschool enrollment (based on the number of *119children in kindergarten the previous year) instead of 100 percent or full enrollment. The plaintiffs claim that all of the Abbott children must be accommodated and that to plan for only seventy-five percent is to renege on the State’s commitment. But the Commissioner has allowed individual districts to develop their own enrollment projections based on reliable indicators and, more important, has stated unequivocally that every child who seeks to enroll in preschool will be accommodated. The issue is not enrollment numbers for planning purposes, but rather, whether there is a need for community outreach to inform parents about the availability of preschool for three- and four-year old children in the Abbott districts. Amicus curiae Newark Emergency Committee to Save Childcare (the Committee) has expressed its concern that:

The DOE has failed to require that significant efforts be made to recruit as many children as possible into the Abbott preschool program. Based on the Committee’s member centers’ experiences, the children who are hardest to reach are often the ones who need high quality preschool the most. An aggressive recruitment campaign is critical.

We have emphasized the need for assessment and evaluation of preschool programs in the SNDs. We expect that existing enrollments can now be reviewed and that low enrollments will trigger a determination whether parents in the community are aware of the district’s preschool programs. If parents are not, the district must make concerted outreach efforts to improve enrollments; if needed, the Commissioner must make funding available for this purpose through the DOE’s supplemental program procedures.

Ill

We are told that no other State has attempted to build a quality-preschool network that merges pre-existing community daycare centers and district-run programs into a coherent unified system drawing upon social service and education funding streams. By 2001, the State plans to fund full-day programs for all three-and four-year olds in the Abbott districts. N.J.A.C. *1206:19A-3.4. At the same time, and as Abbott V anticipated, it is inevitable in an undertaking of this magnitude that there will be disputes about the “implementation, extension, or modification of existing programs, the need for additional supplemental programs, the allocation of budgeted funds, the need for additional funding, and the implementation of the standards and plans for the provision of capital improvements and related educational facilities.” Abbott V, supra, 153 N.J. at 526, 710 A.2d 450. Indeed, many of the various factual and legal issues now before us are not resolved by this opinion and remain pending in the OAL before the Chief Judge.

We do not see the need for the appointment of a Judge of the Superior Court as a Standing Master, and reaffirm the jurisdiction of the OAL to hear “controversies” arising under the School Laws. N.J.S.A. 18A:7A-1 to 7F-34. This disposition is consistent with our view in Abbott V that education disputes are properly decided in the first instance by those statutorily entrusted with that responsibility. In this case, because the districts were required to submit their plans for 2000-2001 on January 15, 2000, adjustments will likely be required. It is also likely that district plans will need revision based on this opinion, and on the outcome in pending administrative proceedings. Those disputes now pending, and those filed in response to DOE action in respect of revised plans, must be expedited in the OAL to the end that final dispositions are issued in time for implementation in the 2000-2001 school year.

Quality preschool programs are a critical component of the whole school reform effort approved in Abbott V. Cooperation between the districts and the DOE is essential to this effort if it is to succeed. For too long, there has been suspicion and distrust. The ACNJ has built a coalition of educators and providers that demonstrates the value of collaboration and consensus building. It is our hope that the adversarial relationship between the parties will give way to a cooperative effort focused on the provision of *121high-quality preschool programs for children in the Abbott districts. The children deserve no less.

IY

Plaintiffs motion in aid of litigant’s rights is. granted in part and denied in part.

Our concurring colleague discusses at some length issues relating to the implementation of whole school reform even though those issues are not "expressly” before us, and "even in the absence of a more specific record.” Infra at 128, 748 A.2d at 100. Whole school reform has not been raised by the parties; nor do we have a record on which to base a judgment on this subject. In short, whole school reform is not before us. We express no views on the Commissioner’s leadership or decision making in respect of the choice of whole school reform models in the Abbott districts.

Among others, the following experts testified before Judge King: Dr. Gerald DeMauro, Director of the Office of Assessment, New Jersey Department of Education; Dr. Jeremy Finn, Professor of Education, SUNY Buffalo; Ms. Leslie Ann Morris, Project Coordinator, Snyder High School Adolescent Health Center, Jersey City; Dr. Gary Nutridlo, Professor of Sociology and Education, Department of Human Development, Teachers College of Columbia University; Dr. Jeffrey Osowski, Assistant Commissioner, Division of Information and Management Services, New Jersey Department of Education.

Allen Odden, Ph.D., is a Professor in the Department of Educational Administration at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and Co-Director of the Consortium for Policy Research in Education at the Wisconsin Center for Education Research. His research and scholarly work focuses on educational policy, finance, and resource allocation.

CEIFA allows the use of early childhood program aid (ECPA) during the first four years of distribution "for educationally meritorious programs," indicating the Legislature’s intent to focus ECPA funding on quality education. N.J.S.A. 18A:7F-16.

NJ.A.C. 9A: 1-2.3 provides: "Each educational program leading to an associate degree shall consist of college courses totaling at least 60 but no more than 66 semester credit hours____"

The educational requirements for a CCP credential are a high school diploma, 720 hours of child care experience, and 180 hours of formal child care education. A CDA credential requires 480 hours of child care experience and 120 hours of formal child care education.

We note that the Assistant Commissioner for Legal and Regulatory Affairs at DHS has submitted an affidavit stating that the State's early childhood initiative includes a one-million-dollar scholarship program for Abbott district staff to obtain college degrees in early childhood education or CDA/CCP credentials. Without more information, we are unable to determine whether this amount is sufficient, but trust that additional funding will be made available, if needed, to help existing daycare staff achieve certification.