In Creating the Universe: Universal Pre-K in the New York City Public School System 1995–2007, Diane F. Grannum shares the inside story of how New York City built one of the most ambitious early childhood systems in the United States—and what those lessons mean for states now debating Universal Pre-K.
Grannum traces her path from teenage teacher’s aide to Region 9 Director of Early Childhood Education, where she helped grow Universal Pre-K from a handful of pilot classrooms to a citywide network serving more than 50,000 four-year-olds each year. Along the way, she shows how policy, psychology, and day-to-day classroom practice came together to create something lasting, not experimental.
Her experience offers a practical roadmap at a moment when many states are still stuck at the “pilot” stage. She argues that if America wants real Universal Pre-K, it has to treat it as a permanent grade with clear standards for class size, staffing, and quality rather than a short-term initiative that changes with each budget cycle.
The memoir also highlights choices that made New York City’s model different. The system used public schools and community-based organizations side by side, extended hours for working families, and integrated social-emotional learning into daily routines. Grannum explains how ideas from Maslow, Piaget, and Erikson shaped classrooms where children could feel safe enough to learn, play, and recover from stress.
“We proved you can scale early learning without losing the child in the process,” Grannum says. “The question now isn’t whether Universal Pre-K is possible. It’s whether we’re willing to fund it, staff it, and protect it like we mean it.”
Creating the Universe looks beyond New York City. Grannum points to national pain points: Pre-K deserts, unstable funding, high teacher turnover, and limited access for children with disabilities or multilingual learners, and connects them back to choices she saw up close.
The book speaks to educators, policymakers, and parents who are tired of hearing that early childhood reform is “too hard” or “too expensive.” Through stories, data, and on-the-ground detail, Grannum makes the case that strong early education is not a luxury item. It is infrastructure.
“Every time a four-year-old walks into a classroom that isn’t ready for them, we miss a chance we can’t get back,” she says. “We know how to do better. We’ve already done it.”
Creating the Universe: Universal Pre-K in the New York City Public School System 1995–2007 is available in paperback and eBook formats through major retailers.
About Diane F. Grannum
Diane F. Grannum, MS in Ed, is an educator and administrator with more than 30 years of experience in early childhood education. She has served as a Special Education teacher, Chapter I Reading teacher, Early Childhood Director, and Region 9 Director of Early Childhood Education in New York City. Across her career, she has focused on expanding equitable access to high-quality learning for young children and supporting the adults who teach and care for them.
