Closing the Kindergarten Readiness Gap During a Child’s Earliest Years

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A publication of Child Care Aware® of Kansas

Winter 2019 Volume 18, Issue 1

KINDERGARTEN READINESS

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CLOSING THE KINDERGARTEN READINESS GAP DURING A CHILD’S EARLIEST YEARS

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IMPORTANT RESEARCH FOR PARENTS

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ELECTION BRINGS NEW FACES, HOPES FOR KANSAS CHILDREN


LEADELL EDIGER Executive Director Child Care Aware® of Kansas

Kansas Child is a publication of Child Care Aware® of Kansas

“The goal of early childhood education should be to activate the child’s own natural desire to learn.” – Maria Montessori

Executive Director Leadell Ediger Editors BWearing Consulting Angie Saenger, Deputy Director Publication Design Julie Hess Design On the Cover Samuel Miller, 19 months, son of Chris and Callee Miller of Goodland, KS. Child Care Aware® of Kansas, 1508 East Iron, Salina, KS 67401, publishes Kansas Child quarterly, which is made possible through the financial support of the members of Child Care Aware® of Kansas and sponsorships from our corporate, private, and foundation partners.

Kansas Child is intended to provide a forum for the discussion of child care and early education issues and ideas. We hope to provoke thoughtful discussions within the field and to help those outside the field gain a better understanding of priorities and concerns. The views expressed by the authors are not necessarily those of Child Care Aware® of Kansas or its sponsors. Copyright© 2019 by Child Care Aware® of Kansas, unless otherwise noted. No permission is required to excerpt or make copies of articles provided that they are distributed at no cost. For other uses, send written permission requests to: Child Care Aware® of Kansas, 1508 East Iron, Salina, KS 67401

Kansas Child is distributed at no cost to Child Care Aware® of Kansas donors. Single copies are available to anyone at $5 each, prepaid.

This quote from amazing early childhood educator Maria Montessori is a great reminder that children come to us ready to learn. In the first three years of life, their little brains develop 80% of the connections they will use for the rest of their lives! Our job is to lay the path before them, to give them what they need to make those connections and blossom. So many people play a role in a child’s development, from totally dependent infant to independent (or so they like to assert) toddler, to inquisitive preschooler, to wondrous schoolage learner. It takes families, communities, and for more than 160,000 Kansas children, it takes early childhood educators to lay the path for each child. I think we can all agree that families serve as the primary foundation for children’s learning. Families provide the necessary space for young

children to experience, learn, and develop the basic ingredients that will help their child be ready for school. Ideally, they provide a loving, safe, stable and nurturing environment that promotes healthy development. Communities also play an important role in the development of children. The community’s role is to build stable environments that allow children and their families to live in safe neighborhoods. Welcoming and supportive communities provide access to public libraries, parks, quality schools and resources to support families who need extra help or might experience a crisis. In short, a healthy community provides a variety of experiences and resources so children and their families can flourish. And finally, families who need child care should have access to quality programs where


IN THIS ISSUE

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Closing the Kindergarten Readiness Gap During a Child’s Earliest Years ................................ 4 Transitioning to Kindergarten: Everyone Must Be Ready.......................... 7 Kansans CAN! Ensure Every Child Enters Kindergarten Prepared for Success................................ 8 Special Circumstances Affect School Readiness......................... 10 Teaching Beyond School Readiness Through Mindfulness............ 11 Important Research for Parents...............................................12 Vroom Brain Building Basics..................13

their children will learn both skills and socialization. At Child Care Aware of Kansas, we work every day to ensure children have access to high-quality educational services. These can and should include home-, center-, and school-based settings. Children come into this world with the tools to be productive adults. It’s our job as families, communities, educators and advocates to ensure they get every opportunity to do just that. Tomorrow’s Kansas workforce is waiting for us to help them flourish. Let’s make it happen.

Safe Infant Sleep..................................... 14

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Children & Sleep......................................15 The Importance of a Medical Home: A Baby’s Perspective.................. 16 School Readiness Begins with a Healthy Smile................................17 Families as Communicators...................18 When It Comes to Car Seats, Don’t Graduate Your Child Too Soon....................................... 19 Election Brings New Faces, New Hopes for Kansas Children...........20 Community Needs Assessment Tips from the Field.................................20

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Book Nook: Winter Stories for Enjoyment and Growth..................... 22


Closing the Kindergarten Readiness Gap During a Child’s Earliest Years

It is an annual ritual. Parents flock to stores around the country to gather everything their child needs for the wondrous first day of kindergarten. Aisle by aisle, colorful options of every tool imaginable attract parents and children alike. But there is something every child needs for kindergarten that cannot be purchased in any store: early learning opportunities. When children have limited access to relevant learning opportunities from birth to age 5, the results are clearly evident on the first day of kindergarten. Of the four million students who begin school in the United States each year, 40 percent show up on the first day with the language and literacy skills one to two years ahead and 20 percent have the readiness skills of a typical kindergarten student. The remaining 40 percent arrive with skills one to three years below the KRISTIN NORELL kindergarten level. CEO, Children’s Reading This five-year range of skills is called the Foundation school readiness gap — or the preparation gap. It manifests itself in all learning areas: Kristin Norell is CEO of The Children’s Reading language and literacy, math, and social Foundation. She formerly worked in children’s book and emotional. publishing and served on the foundation’s board from Some parents believe children who 2011-2017. The Children’s Reading Foundation engages families, schools and communities in children’s learning start school without the necessary skills from birth through third grade to cultivate early literacy will catch up within a year or two, but and school readiness skills. that is not the reality. Research shows that children who are one to three years behind when they start kindergarten usually make a year’s worth of growth every school year — just like all students — but for those who enter kindergarten ....but for those who behind, around 70 percent are still enter kindergarten behind, behind their classmates in the fifth grade. These students form around 70 percent are still the largest group of high school behind their classmates in dropouts, and they have less than the fifth grade. a 2 percent chance of attending a four-year university. While there are exceptions, children who start behind tend to stay behind, and children who start ahead tend to stay ahead. This means the learning opportunities a child has at home, long before kindergarten, determine his or her academic trajectory and have lifelong consequences.

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arrive with skills one to three years below a typical kindergarten student

Families, Schools and Communities Must Work Together to Ensure Children Are Prepared for School on Day One Children who start kindergarten with the language and literacy skills of a typical 5-year-old are well on their way to a successful and satisfying education. While schools don’t create the multiyear readiness gap children exhibit on the first day of kindergarten, it is crucial for

A Publication of Child Care Aware® of Kansas


20%

have the readiness skills of a typical kindergarten student

40%

begin with the language and literacy skills one to two years ahead

Four million students begin school in the United States each year

districts and communities to collaborate normal year of growth plus another year to to close this gap by engaging parents and catch up by even a single grade level. This caregivers during a child’s earliest years. attempt, called catch-up growth, takes a toll Once students start school, those who on economic and human resources for the need skill-building interventions, school districts and socially including additional work time and emotionally for the and assistance from teachers students themselves. with specialized training, The effects of Children who are behind present a tremendous the readiness gap must achieve their normal challenge. Children who are have far-reaching behind must achieve their consequences for year of growth plus another

year to catch up by even a single grade level.

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students and communities. Students who do not graduate from high school face both a grim economic future and cost the country millions of dollars each year. Basic reading, writing and math skills are also a prerequisite for most adult employment and continued personal achievement. Needless to say, the readiness gap is not very different when it comes to math and social and emotional skills. Continued on page 6

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Continued from page 5 The future for all children is brighter when schools and communities prioritize early learning and engage families long before children start school. Empowering parents and caregivers to help nurture a child’s development from birth through third grade considerably increases the child’s potential to learn and enjoy school year after school year.

Reading is Essential for Learning Although children in all cultures instinctively learn language from their parents and caregivers, the brain must be taught to read. The Children’s Reading Foundation® encourages parents and caregivers to Read Together 20 Minutes Every Day™ with their children, starting at infancy. When children are exposed to the language in books, they are developing significant brain connections for language development and for learning to read when the time comes. Children are also learning sounds, vocabulary, prereading and multiple skills that will be reinforced day after day at home and school. Both educators and the medical community recognize the vital importance for all children to be exposed to books. The American Academy of Pediatrics states: Reading regularly with young children stimulates optimal patterns of brain development and strengthens parentchild relationships at a critical time in child development, which, in turn, builds language, literacy and social-emotional skills that last a lifetime.

90% Reading Goal From kindergarten through third grade, children are learning to read; after third grade students are reading to learn. Although reading is paramount to learning, about 75 percent of struggling readers in third grade won’t catch up to their classmates. To help reverse this trend, the Reading Foundation encourages school districts and communities to adopt a 90% Reading Goal. This means 90 percent of thirdgraders will read at or above grade level by the end of the school year. The goal is not easy, but it can be done with a long-term, committed effort. The 90% Reading Goal is how The 6

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Children’s Reading Foundation was What You Can Do formed. In 1996, a group of community Parents and caregivers: You are your stakeholders with the Kennewick School child’s first teacher. Read with your child District in Washington state came together for 20 minutes every day; five minutes to increase reading skills districtwide and now, five later and 10 at bedtime. No set this goal. At the time, only 55 percent matter their age, when you spend 20 of the district’s third-graders were minutes every day reading, children reading at grade level. are learning. Our Read Together You don’t have to be a 20 Minutes Every Day Read with your good reader to help nurture message was spread child for 20 minutes literacy skills in children. The far and wide and most important thing is the every day; five minutes reinforced in local time spent together around media interviews, now, five later and 10 books — even wordless public service messages, at bedtime. books — where stories are employee newsletters, made up, and each time the community presentations, book is opened a new story is told. libraries, bookstores, Having a two-way interaction while professional organizations and by reading not only strengthens the child’s business leaders throughout the area. prereading skills, it also develops solid As a result, reading scores improved. foundations for critical thinking. However, it became clear that unless the Sharing a book with a child has district engaged parents and child care significant additional benefits. Reading providers during children’s powerful together develops socially and emotionally early learning years the district would be confident children who have strong perpetually reacting to the new wave of entering kindergartners — 40 percent with bonds. It also empowers parents and caregivers to become their child’s first readiness skills one to three years below and most influential teachers. If that isn’t grade level. The solution was READY! for Kindergarten, a program of The Children’s enough, reading with a child also reduces the school readiness gap and lowers Reading Foundation. remediation expenses by helping children After implementing the READY! start and stay at grade level. program, the reading achievement scores If you are a parent of a newborn to of Kennewick School District students 5-year-old and are in a community that increased substantially. Nine of 13 offers READY! for Kindergarten parent Kennewick elementary schools reached workshops — attend. You will learn the the 90 percent goal by 2003, and the goal readiness skills that will prepare your child was achieved districtwide in 2006. The for a successful and enjoyable kindergarten district continues to offer free READY! experience. You will also leave with new workshops to parents within its district, ideas about how to guide your child’s and throughout the years reading levels language and literacy, math and reasoning, have remained near 90 percent. and social and emotional learning, The READY! for Kindergarten approach with respect to their individual stage of encourages parents to read with their child development. 20 minutes every day and Play With a Schools, child care and preschool Purpose for 10 minutes each day. Through a series of annual parent workshops, offered programs, foundations, community organizations: You are the direct link to in English or Spanish, participants explore parents. Invest in early learning to help how to create a home environment where close the readiness gap. This focus on learning happens in a fun and purposeful children before they start school will also way. The READY! Age Level Targets© engage families in their essential role in are the framework for developmentally raising a reader and getting their child appropriate lessons and activities using ready for kindergarten. take-home materials and tools that help develop skills commonly associated with It will take all of us to ensure every school readiness in three domains: language child starts school prepared and eager to and literacy, math and reasoning, and social continue learning to reach his or her full and emotional development. potential in school and life. n A Publication of Child Care Aware® of Kansas


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Thursday, March 21, 2019

IN-PERSON 7:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. | Salina Fieldhouse 140 N. 5th St. ONLINE 12 a.m. to 11:59 p.m. | www.MatchMadnessGSCF.org

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