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Essentials For Success In
Preschool And Beyond
LaRue Allen,
Raymond A. and Rosalee G. Weiss Professor
New York University School of Education
Congressional Briefing: Transitions to
School: What Helps Children Succeed?
Sponsored by:
The Congressional Children Caucus
The Bipartisan House Reading Caucus
The American Psychological Association
The Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues
A child who repeats the first grade is more likely than any
others to drop out of school. The most effective way to prevent this is to
intervene early, and to ensure that the child is ready and able to cope with the
transition into elementary school. We also have to be sure that the school is
ready for the children as that run through the school doors for the first time.
The setting needs to be prepared to meet the developmental needs of children who
come there to learn.
I have thought about and worked on this problem from several
angles: in research on the development of minority children and youth; in
collaborating with community school districts in New York City to implement the
State's new Universal Prekindergarten initiative; and in evaluating Even Start
and other early intervention programs for young children and their families
(such as Even Start). These varying perspectives on what keeps children from
succeeding, and what increases their chances of succeeding, have convinced me
that high quality early childhood programs are the single most important tool
that we can offer to families and communities who want their young people to be
literate, competent and well-adjusted. I am even more strongly convinced that
early intervention is vital for minority group children. This is because
minority group children are over-represented among those who drop out of school,
whose levels of achievement are lower, and whose rates of referral to special
education classes with behavior problems is higher than those for white
children.
Our motivation to prevent having disproportionate numbers of
minority children referred for expensive special services should increase
dramatically as their numbers increase over the next few decades. One estimate
has it that by 2003, the number of elementary school-age children will increase
by 2%. But white children will actually decrease by 3% while Black children
increase by 3%. At the same time, the number of Latino children will rise by 15%
and they will become the largest minority group in elementary schools.
Projections through 2020 continue these trends.
My work has convinced me that there are three significant
factors that must be part of effective high-quality programs, both at the
preschool level and beyond. Involving parents, integrating the teaching of
social and academic skills, and creating continuity between preschool and
elementary experiences and among settings that a child negotiates on a daily
basis - these three are key in preventing that first grade failure and launching
a successful academic career. They are key to realizing our national expectation
that all children can and should reach high educational standards. Let me say
just a bit more about these three keys to educational excellence.
I'm sure that many of you know that there are not enough good
early childhood classrooms to serve all children in need. In fact, the demand
for high quality, publicly funded programs is almost twice as great as the
supply. That cost is an obstacle is highlighted by the fact that when publicly
funded programs are available, the number of children from low- and high-income
families who attend is about the same. Among those most in need are children of
working poor families, who are left out because they are poor, but not poor
enough to qualify for placement in subsidized programs. The irony then is that
many at risk children are among those least likely to have access to these
programs. Despite the fact that they have been shown to benefit most from high
quality early childhood programs because they increase their readiness for
schooling.
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Three Keys to Quality Education in the Early
Years
School/Family Partnerships
In preschool and elementary school, and even beyond, one of the
essentials for creating effective learning environments is a strong partnership
between the schools and families. Parents need to be involved in their child's
education in order for their child to succeed. Why? Because if parents show that
they care about schooling, children are more likely to value it themselves. Some
parents help in classrooms, some are on school boards, some help by monitoring
homework closely and giving their child learning experiences at home such as
trips to the library. We don't know yet which activities matter the most, and
why; we don't fully understand why some parents can be mobilized to become
involved and others are more resistant (though I am working on finding answers
to these questions at this very moment). But we do know that some kind of
involvement makes a big difference for children. And we have very encouraging
evidence that when schools design strong, multi-faceted parent outreach and
involvement activities, low-income parents do become highly involved in
their children's education, with benefits to both math and reading achievement.
We also know that some parents very much want to be involved,
but just don't have the time and the energy after working long hours to make
ends meet. Wouldn't it be wonderful if parents could get just 2 hours a month to
spend in their child's classroom? A flexible employer might allow them to make
it up by cutting a few minutes from lunchtime. Just a few minutes off of each
lunch period in a month would allow Mom or Dad to take a son or daughter to
school a morning a month and stay for a while to see first hand what the child's
school life is like and talk to teachers informally. The cost is negligible but
the benefits would be enormous.
But parents' working isn't the only obstacle to a strong
school/family partnership. Teachers need to learn how to work with parents, how
to reach out to those from different cultural backgrounds, how to schedule and
structure outreach opportunities for maximal effect. In our teacher-training
program at New York University we actually teach a course on working with
parents. According to one survey, we are among only 4% of educators who offer
such a course. Only 37% of professors devote even one class period to family
outreach. And when teachers themselves were asked, over 86% of them said that
they need this kind of training. Public schools and schools of education need to
be encouraged to partner in addressing these training needs.
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Promoting academic and social-emotional competence
A second "essential" for educational excellence is
integrating supports for children's academic and social-emotional competence.
These dimensions of competence shouldn't compete with one another for "air
time" in a school day. A child who is going to grow up and be elected to
Congress one day clearly needs to function well in both of these areas. In fact,
an over-emphasis on academic training, especially with very young children, may
actually backfire and impede academic progress. For children of all ages,
getting along with peers and being able to follow the rules of the classroom
helps the child feel part of the school community and hence, more eager to be
involved in school learning activities.
But attending to social/emotional development doesn't mean that
academics are ignored. I'm working with implementing a preschool curriculum to
teach young children how to resolve conflicts, handle daily frustrations, and
increase their ability to manage social situations (She's got the ball that I
want and she's bigger than I am, what shall I say to her to get me access to the
ball without making her mad.). The point of the curriculum is social/emotional
and behavioral competence. The means for achieving those are literacy activities
such as role playing, puppet play and crafts activities - the very same
activities that promote language and cognitive skills. But in order to blend
this curriculum into the school day, teachers have to be trained. They will
eventually be able to use issues that come up in any lesson, whether counting to
10 or learning the days of the week, to advance children's ability to keep
control of their own emotions, and react competently when other kids don't.
These sorts of lessons not only make it easier for children to succeed in
school, but also help children succeed in the real world because theses skills
help them to initiate and maintain friendships and to work well with others.
Continuity
The last critical factor for launching children onto the path of
educational excellence is continuity. What we mean by continuity is creating
smooth transitions from one level of schooling to the next, from preschool to
kindergarten, for example. When transitions aren't managed well, children
suffer. Problems may be academic, social/emotional or behavioral; many children
have more than one adjustment difficulty. Children from minority groups are
vastly over-represented among those who are labeled as "maladjusted."
Going from a preschool that has an unstructured classroom with
several adults for a small group of children and few demands for things like
sitting in a circle, lining up to go to lunch, or tracing the letters of the
alphabet, to an equally excellent kindergarten classroom that differs on all of
these dimensions, can cause culture shock for children and families alike.
Parents are warmly welcomed in preschool and childcare settings. They often help
to maintain or support the center, though admittedly many working parents do not
have the freedom on the job needed to spend an hour helping out in the
classroom. These settings are community based and more likely than public school
to duplicate the child's home culture and values. The language is more likely to
be the child's home language, the holidays celebrated will be familiar, and the
attitudes toward child rearing will more likely be similar to those at home.
So moving to kindergarten means that the child has to deal with
new rules and ways of operating and the parent can't help because they are
similarly suffering from the culture clash. The homework assignments get tougher
and tougher. Parents who didn't like school very much the first time around
won't be eager to help their child with book reading contests. Others who work
long hours to meet a minimal living standard might be interested in reading with
their children but are literally too tired to keep their eyes open when they
finally get home and sit down on the couch.
Programs themselves need to be better aligned so that children
don't have to be re-socialized every time that enter a new school, or new grade
level. Work in a Brooklyn school district on revising the curriculum to align
with new standards led to new opportunities for collaboration among teachers, a
renewed sense of commitment to the whole task of educating a the whole child,
and to schools in which the learning of one grade leads smoothly into the
offerings in the next. Current policies that encourage such alignment and
related professional development for school staff should be monitored and
vigorously reinforced.
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Summary
Prevention is so much more efficient that paying the price for
fixing lives that a marred by poor reading skills, ignorance about how to behave
on a job interview, or a striking inability to control one's impulses. In bits
and pieces, we have the knowledge to erase this grim outcome for thousands more
children. These pieces have to be arranged though, by the concerted will to be
committed to educational excellence and all that it takes to achieve that goal.
We need educational leaders who will partner with knowledgeable researchers to
create school, family, and community partnerships that are unceasing in their
energetic pursuit of the deletion of disadvantage and the achievement of high
standards by all.
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