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What’s Behind the Obsession with Kindergarten Readiness?

August 25, 2017 By Nancy Bailey 8 Comments

Post Views: 1,416

When I was in kindergarten, I had one line in a little play. I said, I am Patrick Potato and this is my cousin, Mrs. Tomato, and I heard laughter. I wanted to be an actress from that moment on.

~Doris Roberts, American actress, author and philanthropist. Raymond’s mom on the sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond.

_______________

In weeks to come, first time kindergartners will hop on the school bus and wave good-bye to teary-eyed moms and dads.

Kindergarten, a German word that means “the children’s garden” should be a joyful introduction to formal learning in school. If children like kindergarten, hopefully, they will go on to enjoy school.

But it has become an obsession in the media and with school reformers. Kindergarten readiness is made to sound like a state of emergency!

Look on Google and you will find dozens of articles about getting ready for kindergarten, including many that advocate learning to read. Formal reading instruction used to take place in first grade.

All of these articles tell us dozens of ways kindergartners should be prepared in order to succeed. Kindergartners must be readier at learning earlier than ever before.

The State of Maryland illustrated well this push for children to be better at kindergarten in 2014.

As part of Maryland’s ongoing commitment to early learning and school readiness, a comprehensive new Kindergarten Readiness Assessment (KRA) was administered for the second time. This assessment is part of the new Ready for Kindergarten: Maryland’s Early Childhood Comprehensive Assessment System (R4K) that was developed to align to the state’s more rigorous PreK-12 College and Career-Ready Standards.

~Maryland’s State Department of Education, 2015-2016

By 2016, the state backed off and only randomly tested children. Education Week reported it as, “Readiness Assessments Fuel Jitters.”

So why are parents and children bombarded with so much hype about kindergarten? Here are some thoughts.

  • It drives parents to push for change when change might not be needed.
  • It makes teachers and schools look like children have failed in the past.
  • It unjustly presumes that children need to learn faster to succeed in the global economy.
  • It makes vouchers and charters sound appealing.
  • It makes brick and mortar schools look obsolete.
  • It makes technology and so-called personalized instruction sound necessary.
  • It sets up nonprofits or for-profit companies to create money-making pre-kindergarten prep programs.

Parents want the best for their children. They will either remove their child from school if they think it’s too rigorous. They will turn to a private school, or they will homeschool.

Or, they will embrace technology or any other reform that they will be convinced will give their child a competitive edge.

The following variables are used to accomplish the listed reform goals.

Kindergarten Readiness Tests

Tests can be used to gather information about how a child is progressing. But kindergarten readiness tests that collect data are troubling.

Prestigious private schools use readiness tests to deny children entrance to school. Will this become the norm to gain entrance to public schools—a sorting machine of those who are capable and those who have difficulties?

College and Career Readiness

Kindergarten has become a time to align standards to the rigor of college and career readiness.

If you are an adult, do you remember hearing about being college and career ready in kindergarten?

Preschool

If kindergarten is the new first grade, preschool is the new kindergarten.

In 2011, TIME had an article, “In Preschool, What Matters More: Education or Play?” They describe a mom who sues her daughter’s preschool for not preparing her child well enough to pass an entrance test for a private kindergarten.

The preschool in this mother’s eyes looked too much like “one big playroom.”

But anyone who understands preschoolers knows that education and play are synonymous. When children are busy playing, they are learning.

Reading Readiness

There are certain pre-reading skills that might help children get a good start reading. A lot of these skills involve curiosity.

But pushing children to read or write, and scripted assessments to measure continuous progress is counterproductive. It can be frightening to a child.

How many children tune out and want nothing to do with reading due to unnecessary pressure in kindergarten, or preschool?

Social Skills and Self-Regulation

As young children grow, a certain amount of self-regulation or self-control is important. Children must learn how to behave in public and at school.

But children in kindergarten are known for activity. They are still developing and growing so there’s a reason why they move around a lot.

That’s why making children sit for long periods of time doing written classwork and taking tests without recess is likened to child abuse. Expecting behavior that does not match a child’s developmental capability should be questioned.

Collecting data on how children behave and providing the information to outside sources should raise concerns.

Redshirting

Redshirting is the practice of keeping a child from entering kindergarten until they are older. This isn’t necessarily a bad thing, especially if a child is younger than their peers and not interested or mature enough for kindergarten.

But holding many children back from kindergarten especially if they are ready to start school is a mistake. Redshirting should never be done solely to give a child a competitive edge.

This could also backfire if a child winds up taller and more physically developed than their classmates in 6th grade.

Transitioning and Data Collection  

How much prekindergarten training must children get?

Transitioning from preschool now involves data collection to see later if the transitioning worked. There’s even a federal data-base to see how children transition to kindergarten.

It is important to determine how to assist poor children to have a good start to school. But we already understand what makes a good preschool and kindergarten. We don’t need data collection for this.

For example: How many elementary schools have school nurses? How many children come to school hungry? How many school counselors are available to assist children and families in crisis?

Summer Preparation

Kindergarten should be an extension of preschool. But some children spend the whole summer beforehand learning about it.

Home visits and helping younger at-risk students learn about school might be helpful. Children living in poverty require help getting good resources. They need good preschools.

But do children need a pre-kindergarten program to train them that it’s OK not to be chosen line leader? Must they study line etiquette so they won’t be disappointed when they get into kindergarten and aren’t chosen to be line leader?

Isn’t kindergarten the place to learn these things?

Here are Some Things to Do Instead

  • Recognize that children deserve to enjoy kindergarten.
  • Continue reading lovely picture books to children after school starts.
  • Don’t push children to read before they are ready.
  • Volunteer to help out at the school.
  • Connect with other parents.
  • Teachers and parents must work together against harmful reforms.
  • Refuse to permit children to be a part of harmful assessment.
  • Be leery of too much technology.
  • Parents hyper about kindergarten success might transfer their concern to their child.
  • Reject data collection, especially if you don’t know for who or why it is being collected.
  • Insist that kindergartners get several recess breaks outside every day.

Kindergarten should be a joyful experience. Do what’s best for your kindergartner. Help them to enjoy life. Don’t forget they are observing and learning about the world around them in ways we may not understand. Do not forget they are first and foremost children.

References

Gewertz, Catherine. “Readiness Assessments Fuel Jitters.” Education Week. January 2, 2015.

Samuels, Christina A. “Payoffs Seen in Smooth Transition to Kindergarten.” Education Week. August 22, 2017.

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Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: college and career ready, kindergarten pressure, kindergarten readiness, Kindergarten readiness tests, preschool, reading readiness, redshirting, school reform, self-regulation, Social skills, summer kindergarten readiness programs

Comments

  1. Lisa M says

    August 25, 2017 at 8:59 pm

    Would that I could reverse the hands of time….I would. I’m in MD (Howard Co). I was instructed by the reading specialist at a Kindergarten parent meeting, that my child would have to learn 50 sight words BEFORE she entered the K classroom. In my heart I knew it was wrong, but I believed this woman and what she said. The summer before Kindergarten was awful with flashcards and fights, but my daughter knew all 50 words. 2 years later I did the same with my son even though I felt it was wrong. Then there were the reading logs…even in kindergarten! The ONLY thing all of this has done is make both of my children hate reading. They are in 8th and 10th and they refuse to pick up a book and read for enjoyment….and I have to understand and go along with it, because I allowed it to happen. If I had to do it over again, I would homeschool both of my children until middle school.

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    • Nancy Bailey says

      August 25, 2017 at 11:22 pm

      Try slipping them some magazines or books they might like without arguing or pushing them to read. Students have a lot of school reading requirements so maybe this is temporary if they aren’t having reading problems.

      As parents we all wish we could go back and correct our mistakes, so don’t be hard on yourself. You followed the reading specialists directions and thought you were doing the right thing.

      It is sad that public schools are not supporting parents like they should due to all the reforms. Parents should not have to homeschool if they are unable or don’t want to.

      Thank you for sharing.

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  2. Roy Turrentine says

    August 28, 2017 at 9:46 am

    It has not been too long since we were confronted with the question of when to begin school. We were inundated with advice from parents who had the means to hold the child out until a year of maturity could take place. Kindergarten requires maturity, we were told. Luckily, we had a daycare person who was knowledgable and had been doing fun things to teach some alphabet and sight words.

    It occurred to me that people who were farther down the pay scale were also struggling with whether to spend another five to seven thousand dollars for another year of day care, or to send the kid on to school. Obviously, poor people have no choice. It struck me quickly that the push to accelerate kids to reading in Kindergarten was going to widen the so called achievement gap in school. Testing would compare poor students a year younger than their more wealthy counterparts who had been kept out of school in anticipation of a challenging kindergarten.

    My own daughter has done well, regardless of her being a bit younger than some of her classmates. Still, I wonder how the experiment is working out? Since I really do not trust testing to indicate anything, how would we know?

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    • Nancy Bailey says

      August 28, 2017 at 8:01 pm

      Thank you, Roy. Glad your daughter has done well. The older children will likely do better than the younger ones. But the real fear is getting rid of classes altogether and place children online for their own computer program at their level. Hard to believe they can do this in kindergarten, but some places are starting as young as preschool!

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      • Roy Turrentine says

        August 29, 2017 at 1:34 pm

        How would you feel about grouping by level of performance based on teacher judgement? I have often thoug that age grouping like we do is particularly hard on the boys, who are always developmentally a bit behaind. Grade level seems a bit mythological to me.

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  3. grace greenwell says

    August 28, 2017 at 9:47 am

    I, as a home daycare owner, am required to start assessing my infant daycare children every few months. This is supposed to be for preschool and kindergarten readiness…already.

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    • Lisa M says

      August 28, 2017 at 2:26 pm

      I know of a very popular daycare worker in my area that gave up her daycare because she refused to start assessing the pre schoolers that she was watching. Her licensing was going to be dependent upon her doing these “assessments” and she was going to have no part of it. She was good at what she did and I know her services are missed by more than a few parents. This was in home daycare and she had 6 or less children.

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    • Nancy Bailey says

      August 28, 2017 at 8:05 pm

      That’s too bad. Since daycare workers often run their own programs, it’s interesting they use their licensing to push assessment. Thank you both.

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