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Marian Wright Edelman

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Full Day Kindergarten: A Missing Half-Step in Our Schools

Posted: 10/14/11 04:01 PM ET

In Pennsylvania, many children who had been getting excited about their first day of full-day kindergarten were disappointed when full-day kindergarten fell victim to state budget cuts. Massachusetts families in 80 school districts had to pay an average of $3,110 this year for their children to attend full-day kindergarten. Families in West Valley, Washington, got lucky. The original tuition for full-day kindergarten was reduced to $175 - $280 a month, depending on the family’s income. Meanwhile, children living in a handful of states with publicly-funded full-day kindergarten like Louisiana, North Carolina, and Mississippi enrolled at their schools the same way children in public schools across the country enroll in first grade—without parents having to pay for it.

Public education in America is supposed to be built on a foundation of equal access for all children. But access to full-day kindergarten is more like a game of chance in which the lottery of geography and income determine which children are the winners. While the American public generally thinks of public education as a kindergarten through grade 12 system and federal education reform says K-12, for many children full-day kindergarten is a missing half-step in the all important early learning continuum.

We know good full-day kindergarten works to help children achieve. Study after study has shown full-day kindergarten plays a vital role in children’s educational development, boosting cognitive learning, creative problem-solving, and social competence, and promoting positive school outcomes including higher academic achievement in later grades, faster gains on literacy and language measures, and better attendance through the primary grades. When offered in the context of an aligned, seamless continuum of early learning, expanding access to full-day kindergarten becomes a critical strategy for closing achievement gaps by third grade, the stage at which success in school depends upon a child’s ability to transition from “learning to read” to “reading to learn.”

Research comparing half-day and full-day kindergarten strongly suggests children benefit more from a full-day kindergarten. Full-day kindergartners are more prepared for school: they do better with the transition to first grade, show significant gains in school socialization, and are equipped with stronger learning skills. These children have enhanced social, emotional, and behavior development, and equally important, reduced retention and remediation rates.

Only ten states require by statute that school districts provide publicly-funded full-day kindergarten, 34 states require school districts to provide half-day kindergarten, and six states don’t require districts to provide any kindergarten. District of Columbia public schools offer full-day kindergarten for all children at no cost although not required by law. As the budget crisis has advanced across the country, many local school districts are cutting funding for full-day kindergarten, making the inequality worse. And in some school districts with full-day kindergarten, children are able to enroll only if their parents pay tuition for the half day not publicly funded, if they qualify for tuition assistance based on family income, or if the child is at risk of failing in school.

Unequal access to full-day kindergarten means many young children lose a critical opportunity to develop and strengthen foundational skills necessary for success in school and lifelong learning. Full-day kindergarten can no longer be considered an optional add-on or intervention program especially now that students are being held to new and more rigorous academic standards with the adoption of the Common Core Standards in 43 states and the District of Columbia and grade-level assessments of student mastery scheduled to begin in 2014. While these standards are consistent across states, the number of instructional hours varies dramatically from state to state and even from district to district within a state. Whether a child receives two and a half hours or six hours of kindergarten instruction a day, the expectation of mastery of core standards remains the same. Unless we fix this, some children will pay the price of too much to learn and too little time in which to learn it because states and school systems don’t provide the time and resources children need to meet and surpass common core standards.

All students in America must have a fair chance to meet and surpass standards so we must make their true “first grade,” kindergarten, equal in importance to grades one through 12. The Children’s Defense Fund’s Full-Day Kindergarten Campaign aims to bridge the gaps by working with educators and advocates in targeted states to expand access to and funding for full-day kindergarten; publishing reports and disseminating informational resources to raise awareness and support reform; building a national coalition to promote full-day kindergarten policy reforms; and advocating for federal incentives to support state efforts to expand access to full-day kindergarten. Join us and learn more about what is being provided to children in your district and state. We can’t keep leaving millions of children a half-step behind in school before they even get started.

 

Follow Marian Wright Edelman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/ChildDefender

 
 
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04:54 PM on 11/13/2011
NOVEMBER 2011: "the National School Boards Association's Center for Public Education released a report showing that children who attended pre-K plus half-day kindergarten were more likely to read at high levels by the third grade than children who attended only full-day kindergarten."
http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/early_years/2011/11/new_report_pre-k_half_day_k_reading_success.html
There is NO REASON to irresponsibly institutionalize our children!!! Full Day is too structured and pressured. The standards are inappropriate. Let the children be home, or with an aunt, or nanny, or sitter or any child care provider who will let them play and be children... Let the parents decide how to raise their own children. Children need balance. Their work IS play. They need time for childhood and to grow into healthy adults. There is more at stake here. Protect the children and preserve the rights of parents... Take a stand... www.HalfDayKindergarten.org
05:52 PM on 11/09/2011
Children learn through play. That is a fact.
Children also need balance...
Time at school, yes, but also time with family, time outside, time to play...
Common sense. Oh and also backed by science...
Why is this information being ignored?
A child can do just find in half day...
Half day needs to remain a choice.
Do not mandate full day. That is a form of abuse.
Protect the children. Preserve the rights of parents.
Please read more...
HalfDayKindergarten.org
06:08 PM on 10/15/2011
Children not prepared for Kindergarten could easily attend a summer program a month before Kindergarten to be brought up to speed. I mean , really how long does it take to teach children their ABC'c, colors and shapes? The reason why kids are unprepared is that nothing is expected of them.
Too much time in school is wasted listening to teachers drone on. Get the job done and you'd still have plenty of time for kiddie pool swimming, popsicles and eating dinosaur on a stick.
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PTAOfficerforObama
A micro bio is a terrrible thing to waste.
11:43 PM on 10/15/2011
Why don't you stop by your local school and show them how it is done...
05:53 PM on 10/15/2011
I wouldn't increase Kindergarten hours but I would make round the clock, drop-in daycare available at every school site. Having a service like this can be a lifeline to poor parents who need to look for work, have family emergencies or are having knock down, drag out fights with their partner. Children should all have a safe place to go to where the staff knows them and their situation. Paying for around the clock staff is much cheaper than having to incarcerate a child who grew up with a dysfunctional, violent home life. The transition from home-school should be seamless and it should be a place where children are happy to spend their time at. If children are safe and protected, interventions can be accomplished with parents. Above all, protect and support children regardless of the cost. Bring our troops home and there will be plenty of money to ensure that American children grow up peacefully and loved in their communities.
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nikanj
free the fnords
09:59 PM on 10/15/2011
And also, too, nurse practitioner clinics associated with the schools.
And vans equipped for the NP's to make house calls.
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04:18 PM on 10/15/2011
You can always tells when a so-call liberal and/or champion of the poor was given a big fat check from a corporation....when they start talking and saying ridicules non-sense crap in order to justify their their new funding! This lady said the same crap about health care for child that has left millions without any care...again, always to justify their corporate funding! Listen, poverty pimps......We need fully funded universal pre-school, day care and reduced classroom reduced funding (a typical class in kinder is now 32:1 and no aides) in order to even start about talking about full-time kindergarten. Again a Non-governmental Overlord speak about something they no nothing about in the real world!
03:26 PM on 10/15/2011
if it were up to educators, newborns would be dropped off at the nearest school system on the way home from the hospital. millions of Americans never went to kindergarten and things were just fine. today they have kindergarten as young as 4 and what the high schools turn out now, most colleges have to be retrain freshman students so they can be ready for college classes. the whole kindergarten, theory has become more of an indoctrination, than education..
03:33 PM on 10/15/2011
Most educators don't want this and the ones who do are misguided (and probably new and idealistic) that they can save the child from his home life. The people to blame here are the politicians who cater to irresponsible parents, advocacy groups who know nothing about education, and the current crop of education reformers who are looking to make a quick buck.
10:43 PM on 10/17/2011
Agree. I went to kindergarten back in the 1960s and it was about 2.5 hours a day. Most of the children in my first grade class never went to kindergarten and nobody was behind because of it. I think this is part of a bigger problem of many parents having to work and not having anyone to watch the kids and so students are very unprepared for school from K-12 . TV and videogames are the babysitter and no human being is at home taking care of the children.
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kbuffler42
03:05 PM on 10/15/2011
I usually agree with Marion Edelman, but in this instance I have to disagree. I realize times have changed and children are growing up in a more sophisticated world than the one I grew up in or raised my children in (during the 60's, 70's & 80's. Ms. Edelman sites numerous statistics that support her premise that full day kindergarten is the way to go. The piece that is missing from consideration is the one diected toward the concept of childhood. in a world where people are living longer lives, we seem to be prescribing shorter childhoods, beginning with earlier and earlier enrollment in an educational setting. In most school districts children entering kindergarten are five years old, five! That's a blink of an eye when measured against the life expectancy of American children. From then on, it's an increasingly competetive life spent in school as well as organized activities after school, on weekends and during (increasingly) limited school vacations. Some of this is a direct result of fewer "stay at home" parents and the resulting need for resources to "mind" the children. But what about childhood? What about the importance of time to "imagine", day dream, confront and learn to deal with boredom? In a recent article Ms. Edelman called for a national parent audit: a self exam to determine if we are doing our jobs as parents. Part of that job might be committing more time to providing children with time to be children.
01:38 PM on 10/15/2011
Well, if you look at news sources outside of the far let MSNBC and Huff Post, you'll learn that also in Mass. the liberals are banning Thanksgiving and Halloween now for school children because these liberals have determined now that these holidays to be "insensitive". What stupidity. This is what happens when you let the left get ahold of the schools.
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Mrs S2004
08:48 PM on 10/15/2011
Yeahhhh.... except that you are talking about ONE school district, and more importantly, the ban on Halloween isn't coming from liberals... sorry buddy, that is the right wing fundamentalists who don't want kids celebrating Halloween because of of the occult, witchcraft, etc.
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PTAOfficerforObama
A micro bio is a terrrible thing to waste.
11:46 PM on 10/15/2011
In our district the fundamentalists do not want Halloween celebrated as it is either a Pagan or Catholic holiday...
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Loyal Whig
"Some animals are more equal than others."
10:04 AM on 10/15/2011
Engaged parents is what makes students successful in school. I read to my daughter every night from before two years old.
12:40 PM on 10/15/2011
Unfortunately, too many people see doing what you did as a luxury that other people don't have time or can't afford to do. It's quite sad.
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trackerbelle
Hoping for a Change in 2012
10:01 AM on 10/15/2011
All research shows that students even out academically by the 3rd grade- whether they attend preschool and kindergarten or don't attend.

Preschool and full day kindergarten is just taxpayer funded babysitting.
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reader110
09:18 AM on 10/15/2011
I went to kindergarten in the 60s - half day. It didn't hamper my success. Why do you want to push kids from the very start? You'll have plenty of time to badger them into believing they're not learning fast enough.
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RhiannonRings
Childfree and loving it!
11:06 AM on 10/15/2011
You beat me to it.
09:17 AM on 10/15/2011
In my opinion:
Kids in good homes do not need this. Kids in not so good homes do need this.
We ought, as a society, insure the needs [including play] of all children are met. Some children will need public, tax support; others will not.
Five is the earliest age kids should be required to attend school, seven may be better.
Some children need public tax support while in the womb.
12:41 PM on 10/15/2011
Yes, but since many bleeding hearts think there is a stigma to being disadvantaged, everyone else has to go along so no one is embarrassed.
08:28 AM on 10/15/2011
The money would be better spent on mandatory pre-K programs.
10:48 PM on 10/17/2011
I disagree. Babies and toddlers should not be in school.
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02:42 AM on 10/15/2011
Good to see such united opposition to this dreadful idea.

Childhood is too short as it is - and half-days are pretty much the ONLY humane way to introduce kids to the educational conveyor belt.

We want well rounded, vital citizens - NOT automatons...
08:13 AM on 10/15/2011
You really think that??? I teach Kindergaren and can tell you every child in my class who (for whatever reason) did not attend Pre-K ...and certainly, any child who doesn't have full day Kindergarten is at a serious disadvantage in EVERY way..academically, socially and emotionally!

Maybe in some fantasy 1950s world...some wonderful stay at home mom (or dad) is able to provide their 4 and 5 year old child with enriching educational experiences for 6 hours a day. But more likely than not - they're planting the child in front of the boob tube. You talk about automatons. (The only saving grace is that PBS remains on the air to provide some educational enrichment to those families who can't afford to (or don't have access to) go elsewhere).

The children most likely affected by these recent cutbacks are those kids who need it the most, many having parents who were not well enough educated themselves. This is America. A united front to steal education out from under the noses of those who can least afford it should not masquerade as being humane. Rather, it's a way to keep people down.
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reader110
09:23 AM on 10/15/2011
Oh, I see. Since both parents work, they don't have time to spend with their kids, so you think it's better to have a full time babysitter.

Children would be much better off if they're parents encouraged them to read a book rather than insisting that they need a full day of kindergarten.
09:24 AM on 10/15/2011
But that doesn't mean you make the parents who have sacrificed (through either revised work schedule or not working) send their kids off to full day kindergarten.

I seriously disagree that kids who don't do full day kindergarten are at a disadvantage. I've put three of them though in the last five years and they all are great students with lots of friends and well-adjusted. The teachers in our school system are getting it done in half a day and I have yet to see another child who is better off for having done full day. Full day is merely stretching out the academics and allowing down time for the kids -- and downtime can be done at home…you know that place that determines how successful a child will be at school.

I will agree that at risk kids could use preschool and possibly full day kindergarten. But I also believe schools have taken on too much of a parenting role (not by their choice, but by annoying legislation) that has not helped education. If anything I worry that catering to those parents rather will only further more irresponsible parenting.
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kbuffler42
03:07 PM on 10/15/2011
I agree and am glad to hear someone else say it. I was beginning to feel like a dinosaur!
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Peter Combs
Amused by the illogical..no, NOT a Republican
02:10 AM on 10/15/2011
Full Day?...when are the kids going to play without structure? have fun, ride bikes around their neigborhoods, or is the absurd.."it takes a village " angle?

Let them out by noon or one..plenty of time for sitting in classes in 1st grade.
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Corie Lemmon
08:48 AM on 10/15/2011
My first grader loves being in school all day, he doesn't bring home homework, so when he gets home, we have fun and we have plenty of time. It also means less tv, and he is being taught by someone who know what they are doing. Most families have to put their kids in daycare when not in school, so they are playing, but wouldn't you rather your child be learning (and having fun at school) rather than in daycare? At school, in kindergarten, they get quite a bit of leisure time, such as their daily class (library, gym, music, or art) a 15 minute recess, 15 minutes of snack time, and then playtime. So you are looking at less than two hours per day where they are actually being "educated" on their ABC's and writing. In pre-K, they teach the ABC's and numbers, and how to write them. In Kindergarten, they have a three month refresher on the ABC's and numbers, if not longer. Full day is beneficial in so many ways. Children have less shuffling around, which means less confusion for them. Less germs transferred because they are not going from school to daycare to home. As for kids riding their bikes around the neighborhood, most kids CAN'T do that, because of their neighborhoods.
09:27 AM on 10/15/2011
Many people have made the choice to have someone at home with their kids though - I changed my hours so either my husband and I could be there. There is no need to force those kids into full day kindergarten especially if the school is getting the job done in half a day. If you look at the highest performing schools in New England, most of them are on half day kindergarten.
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09:40 AM on 10/15/2011
so, why should the school have to pay for full day if in fact there is only two hours of academics?
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PTAOfficerforObama
A micro bio is a terrrible thing to waste.
11:50 PM on 10/15/2011
I hate to tell you but they will not do those things when they go home. They will watch TV or play video games.