`Voices Goes Public ' '" • g, o , : Cover Story The Buck Stops Here Michigan's top early childhood educator has deep religious, community and family roots. DIANA LIEBERMAN Staff Writer A fter nine years with the Michigan Department of Education, Lindy Buch is finally moving from Huntington Woods to East Lansing. Buch's career path has taken her from preschool teacher to top early childhood educator in the state of Michigan. She has directed childcare centers at the University of Michigan and Eastern Michigan University; taken part- and full-time teaching jobs at Detroit-based Merrill-Palmer Institute, Mercy College and Wayne State University; led the East Lansing-based Michigan Association for the Education of Young Children; earned a Ph.D. and served on the board of Oak Park's Temple Emanu-El. Along the way, she and her husband, Ray, have been involved parents of two children: Elana, 24, now a graduate student at the University of Michigan's school of social work, and Daniel, 22, who has just completed a year traveling after his U- M graduation. "I couldn't have done it without my husband, my parents, and my babysitting co-op," Buch said. "The informal infrastructure of Huntington Woods was a great support." The Buches are not completely severing their roots in the community. They'll come back to visit frequently. And they'll continue their membership at Oak Park's Temple Emanu-El, where Ray Busch chaired the Synagogue 2000 committee and Dan was president of the youth group. _...._.. Not Just Babysittzng f fa o &V 8/15 2003 70 – As supervisor of early childhood and parenting programs for the Michigan Department of Education, Buch is in charge of all state-run early childhood, parent education and after-school pro- grams for school-aged children. She is Michigan's liaison to Federal childcare pro- grams such as Head Start and represents the department on state, multi-state and national com- mittees and organizations dealing with the complex issue of early childhood development and educa- tion. "The more we learn about young children, the more we know that the early years are the most important," Buch said. "We can't afford as a society to ignore any stu- dents. The bottom line is, we are going to have to offer early childhood as part of public education system for all children." Nearly 40 percent of the births in Michigan are covered by Medicaid, meaning that the parents are poor. Frequently, these children are born to single mothers. But poverty is a risk factor that can be overcome with well-trained, competent teaching and active After graduating from Berkley High, she went to parenting. And, she pointed out, it's not the only the University of Michigan, where she earned risk factor. bachelor's degrees in both English and elementary Low birth weight, inattentive or frequently education, followed by a master's degree in early changing childcare — even being born to a parent childhood education and special education certifi- who isn't a reader — all these are signs that point cation. She directed the university's childcare pro- to trouble acquiring the academic and social skills gram and took teaching jobs in Chelsea and needed for success in school and later life. Manchester. "We don't need everybody to go to college, but Fast-forward to 1979, and life in Huntington we need everybody to be able to read to have a Woods. job," Buch said. "I had a little baby and my mother said, 'I don't Language learning is a complex process, Buch care what you do, but I'm taking the baby once a said. As a parent, you notice your baby learning week.'" one word; then two Joan Firestone, now early more; and, suddenly, _ childhood director for the an explosion of lan- , Oakland Schools and a steer- guage occurs, with the ing committee member of toddler learning so Federation's Alliance for many words all at Jewish Education, also had a once that you can't young child at the time. She keep track of them. suggested that the two women This is such a cru- share a job at Mercy College, cial time," Buch said. teaching potential teachers. "The level of the So, one day a week, Buch explosion — that sud- left Elana with her mother den language acquisi- and began teaching college. tion — that's so This went on for nine years. important. If it By that time, there were two explodes lower, you babies and a second part-time can never get back to job. it." "We decided when Dan It takes consistent, started pre-school, I'd go back empathetic, stimulat- to school," Buch said. ing childcare to nour- She earned a Ph.D. in early ish language develop- childhood education at Wayne ment. State University. "Language is a "People kept telling me, social skill, and it's since I'd been teaching all learned in the context Lindy Buch relaxes for a moment as she prepares to those years, the degree was move to East Lansing. of a relationship," actually a union card," she Buch said. "Even if remembered. "But I really people pay a lot for childcare, the frequency with learned a lot." which the caregiver changes is important. When we In the years since Buch started her career in early put children in centers, we move them from group childhood education, she has seen the need for to group. We have to be careful how, and how quality full-day preschool education become more often, we do this." crucial. Society needs to "grapple with how we do non- Seventy percent of the children below school age parental care." in Michigan live in households where all adults "Done correctly, it can mitigate the adverse work full time, she said. This is true for families in effects of bad home conditions," she said. the wealthier areas of Oakland County as well as in Detroit. "As Jews, we have responsibility for tikkun olam Gaining Credentials [repairing the world]," Buch said. "But I have also Buch, 53, said she received an excellent education been concerned about the Jewish community and in the public schools of Detroit and Berkley. the quality of care our children are getting while Back when her name was Lindy Broad, she their parents are away. attended Bagley and Pasteur schools in Detroit. In "As kids spend more and more time in day care eighth grade, she transferred to Norup Junior High programs, we have to be more and more aware of in Oak Park. the quality of instruction they are receiving." fl o