Is Everybody Ready for Kindergarten?: A Toolkit for Preparing Children and Families
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Is Everybody Ready for Kindergarten? - Angèle Sancho Passe
Introduction
My first day of kindergarten was on a bright day in January 1956 in Oran, Algeria. Despite the warmth of the North African winter sun shining on the school courtyard, I remember being cold. It was not a pleasant experience. I could see my mother’s teary eyes as my new kindergarten teacher sternly told her to leave quickly. I was a smart little girl and eager to learn, but throughout that first year of school, it became obvious that Madame D did not approve of my learning style or my mother’s parenting style, so she dourly predicted neither one of us would go far in life! We were glad for the June siroccos, the hot desert winds that signaled the beginning of summer vacation.
My own children started kindergarten in 1977 and 1980 at Marcy Open School in Minneapolis. They both had Greg as their kindergarten teacher. He was a wonderful educator, blending personal warmth and outstanding teaching skills to launch his young students’ academic careers. Greg was famous for his teddy bear parades, as well as for making stone soup and pulling loose teeth, an important rite of passage for five- and six-year-olds. When I volunteered in his classroom, I learned what an excellent kindergarten should look and feel like. This kindergarten was both developmentally appropriate and academically challenging. My children’s positive experiences made up for my own experience of kindergarten.
In the 1980s and early 1990s, as an early childhood teacher and parent educator in the Minneapolis public schools, I designed several transition-to-kindergarten projects, the most successful model being a workshop called It’s Time to Think about Kindergarten.
During three evenings, the workshop includes the topics Choosing a School,
tips for picking a school; Your Child’s Experience in Kindergarten,
tips for understanding what children do and learn in kindergarten; and Your Experience as the Parent of a Kindergartner,
options for family involvement. The sessions were offered to families with a child who would soon enter school. They could attend as many sessions as they wanted. An elementary school and the community education department cosponsored the program, and it was free to parents, who came to learn about how to prepare their child and themselves for this new experience. One of the kindergarten teachers hosted the group in his classroom, which was always a big hit as parents could visualize their child learning in that setting.
In the mid and late 1990s, as a district administrator, I maintained my focus on the transition to kindergarten by leading the School Readiness Collaborative. Part of my job was to work with community and district early childhood programs to ensure they implemented quality preschool services. I also worked with elementary schools to design transition-to-kindergarten activities.
As an educational consultant since 2000, I have continued to think about the transition to kindergarten while designing curriculum, writing articles, conducting studies, facilitating focus groups, and training educators at local and national conferences. It’s fair to say that the transition to kindergarten from the point of view of children, families, preschool programs, and elementary schools has been on my mind, personally and professionally, for a long time. I have learned a lot in the process and will share that with you in this book.
Malika is standing in front of me, her brown eyes sparkling and her hands on her hips. You know what? After I’m five, I am going to kindergarten!
You are? And what is that?
I ask.
That’s the big school, silly!
She rolls her eyes, incredulous at my ignorance of life’s important things. For the big kids, because I am big now.
Malika’s mom sighs. Yes, my baby is a big kid now.
She looks
proud and a little apprehensive at the same time. Her face tells me that going to kindergarten will be a big event for this family, even though Malika is going to the neighborhood elementary school, which is only five blocks from her home and where her brother is already in the second grade.
Going to kindergarten is the official beginning of a child’s educational career. It is an important part of child development and the family life cycle. It is also an important time for the school to make a good first impression. Similarly, I want to begin this book’s important discussion by presenting my beliefs, which are based on current research, best practices, and my years of professional experience and observations.
•The transition to kindergarten is not a one-time event.
A transition is a passage from one place or stage to another. It requires adapting feelings, thoughts, and behaviors from an old situation to a new one. When children enter kindergarten, they go from the intimate world of home or child care to the institutional world of education, especially if they attend a public school. Their families make the same adaptation. The transition is not a one-time event happening on the first day of school; rather, the transition begins before children enter school and continues during their first year. The family, the preschool program, and the receiving elementary school all play important roles in making the transition smooth and productive. In order for this to happen, these three groups must know one another well, understand their different roles, share information, express their hopes, and work together for the children’s benefit (Pianta, Rimm-Kaufman, and Cox 1999).
•Going to kindergarten is a developmental milestone.
Regardless of educational, cultural, or socioeconomic background, all families know about going to school, and all families want their children to do well in school. The entry into kindergarten is a milestone in the lives of families, likely the most important step since the child was born. Even for children who have attended a child care center or a family child care home, kindergarten is the beginning of their formal education. Starting kindergarten is exciting and scary at the same time. It can also be intimidating, particularly for families with lower levels of education and for new immigrants who are not familiar with the culture and language of education.
•All families want the best for their children.
Depending on their level of education and knowledge of the educational system, families have different ways of viewing kindergarten. Highly educated families tend to approach the entrance to kindergarten in the same way they would approach looking for a college. They conduct research and visit schools to choose the one that best meets their needs. Parents feel confident in their ability to advocate for their child, so they ask about curriculum, visit the school’s Web site to review test scores, and sign up to volunteer in the classroom.
Immigrant families, families in poverty, and families with low educational levels are less familiar with the culture of education. These families are not as aware of their choices, and they may not know how to conduct the search. If their child already attends a preschool program, they rely on guidance from the staff. They also expect that the school system will help them and provide the best for their children. They are unsure about the rules and expectations schools have regarding family involvement. Unfortunately, if they act in ways that do not match educators’ hopes, they are perceived as being uninterested in their children’s education (Christenson 1999).
•Not all children have the same readiness for kindergarten.
State and national studies estimate that about half of children do not have the skills needed to be successful in school. There is a wide difference in the experiences of children before they enter kindergarten. Children who participate in a quality preschool program (at a center or in family child care, public or private) are better prepared for school; however, about one-third of three-and four-year-old children in low-income families are enrolled in preschool, compared to about two-thirds of children in higher-income families (Olson 2007). At the same time, a child’s home environment can either enhance or limit the child’s opportunities for learning (Hart and Risley 1995, 1999).
To be ready for kindergarten, five-year-old children should have the early literacy and social-emotional skills to take care of themselves. In addition to being reasonably healthy, they also should have the language to ask adults for what they need as well as the ability to play cooperatively with their classmates. School-ready five-year-olds should also understand and be able to do the new things they are learning academically. More children could be ready for kindergarten if their parents, caregivers, and early childhood teachers would prepare them intentionally for kindergarten.
•Early childhood programs have a big role in the transition to kindergarten.
Preschools, child care centers, family child care homes, Head Start, and early childhood curriculum in public schools are the programs sending children to kindergarten. They are usually familiar with the expectations of school readiness set by state or federal mandates, but they often feel disconnected from the expectations of the elementary schools in their community. They need to have as much information as possible about what happens in kindergarten classrooms. When there is a strong connection between the pre-K and the K-12 worlds, there are more opportunities to offer continuity for children and families (Pianta and Kraft-Sayre 2003).
•Schools must be ready for children and families.
Even though kindergarten is not part of compulsory education in every state, in 2005 about three-quarters of children in the United States attended a half-day or full-day public kindergarten (Editorial Projects in Education 2007). Look at the big discount-store displays in August to realize the importance of schooling in our culture. Families view kindergarten as the official first year of school; yet, not all schools treat children and families in the same way. Some schools are warm and welcoming places, while others are cold and unwelcoming. The latter is particularly true for immigrant families, families of color, and families in poverty. In focus groups, these families complain about a lack of respect and worry that their children are not being accepted.
Family involvement is at its highest in kindergarten and tends to decline thereafter. If they feel welcome and connected, families with kindergarteners are open and ready to develop loyalty to the school and the school district. For the school district, this first year is the most critical opportunity to engage families as partners in education. The maxim There is only one time to make a good first impression
applies here. Rather than only asking parents to adapt to the rules and views of the school, it is important for the school to learn what families want and expect. This honors parents’ hopes and dreams for their children and engages them positively as partners in education right from the beginning (Doucet and Tudge 2007).
•Coordination and planning make the transition to kindergarten easier.
Families expect a smooth path from preschool to kindergarten. Not only is learning continuity for children important, but it is also the law for children in early childhood special education (Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act 2004) and for children of low-income families (No Child Left Behind Act of 2001; Improving Head Start