Susan Ochshorn is an authority on early childhood education. She reports with pleasure that many states and districts are expanding access to pre-kindergarten, but notes with unhappiness that the political leaders who are expanding early childhood education are making a terrible mistake: They are introducing four- and five-year-olds to Common Core and imposing “rigor” on these little ones.
Rigor for 4-year-olds? What about their social-emotional development, which goes hand-in-hand with cognitive skill-building? What about play, the primary engine of human development?
Unfortunately, it seems like we’re subjecting our young children to a misguided experiment.
“Too many educators are introducing inappropriate teaching methods into the youngest grades at the expense of active engagement with hands-on experiences and relationships,” Beverly Falk, author of Defending Childhood told me. “Research tells us that this is the way young children construct understandings, make sense of the world, and develop their interests and desire to learn.” She isn’t alone.
Early academic training has become an obsession among child development experts and teachers of young children as the Common Core standards have encroached upon the earliest years of schooling.
Ochshorn cites research studies that show that children actually learn better if they are not subjected to an academic curriculum too soon.
It’s not that they can’t read at this young age. Some pick it up on their own. In fact, studies have shown that children as young as 4 or 5, including those defined “at risk,” can be taught decoding skills, the foundation for reading. But research has also shown that youngsters who begin this process later than their peers — by as much as 19 months — eventually reach parity in fluency, and do even a little better on reading comprehension.
And we may well actually be doing kids harm.
Earlier this year, the report “Reading Instruction in Kindergarten: Little to Gain and Much to Lose” highlighted the research of developmental psychologist Rebecca Marcon. In a study of three different curricula, characterized as “academically oriented” or “child-initiated,” she found negative effects of overly directed preschool instruction on the later school performance of 343 students, 96% of them African-American and 75% eligible for subsidized lunch. By third grade, the differences in academic achievement were minor. But by fifth grade, students in the academic preschool earned significantly lower grades than those who had spent their days in classrooms in which they were actively engaged, with their peers and teachers, in the process of learning.
The countries that are allegedly ahead of us in Ed do not start the rigor/structure/practice until age 6 or 7, I believe.
Our trying to be more competitive by lowering the age for rigor and structure further is ridiculous and abusive.
Indeed, Finnish kids don’t learn to read in kindergarten
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/finland-schools-kindergarten-literacy_560ece14e4b0af3706e0a60c
It’s also worth reading the links, such as the one about 45 minute classes and 15 minute breaks
http://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2014/06/how-finland-keeps-kids-focused/373544/
The effectiveness and usefulness of “hard work” probably needs to be reconsidered.
The current reform emphasis on grit and academic training in this “misguided experiment” is like having wealthy, disgruntled passengers telling pilots how to fly airplanes.
Not only in the MSM but on this very blog, supporters of rheephorm have defended CCSS and such by claiming that they are ‘internationally benchmarked’ and ‘in line with best international practices.’
I await their assertions re the subject brought up by this posting.
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Unfortunately, my grandson is now in kindergarten and he is behind. In the old days he would be a normal 5 year old, but now he is expected to learn his sight words and begin reading, a task he is simply not ready for. In the old days he would be learning his letters and sounds instead of memorizing a dolch list. He has no learning disability, yet he is considered learning delayed in the world of Common Core.
I fear for these young children who are being brought up in a state of anxiety instead of being allowed to enjoy a happy childhood full of joy and play and, yes, learning (but in a natural, not artificial way).
flos56: but if the goal is to educate/train/accustom the vast majority to the need to be labeled, sorted and ranked—with the added “benefit” of acceptance at a very very early age that its perfectly acceptable to live in a world that guarantees few winners and many many losers—then what you describe makes perfect sense.
Caveat: only to be imposed on OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN. For THEIR OWN CHILDREN, well, let’s look at where Mayor Rahm Emanuel sends his own children, U of Chicago Lab Schools. From the website of said school:
[start]
In the Nursery and Kindergarten Program, children learn to play and play to learn. They enjoy opportunities to take initiative, make friends, experience a sense of belonging, expand language, increase logical thinking, and develop social awareness. Particular attention is paid to activities that support mathematical and spatial thinking, literacy, knowledge about the physical world and the development of empathy. The outdoors is viewed as an extension of the classroom and affords daily opportunities for a great variety of physical challenges, social play as well as an exploration of the natural world.
[end]
Link: http://www.ucls.uchicago.edu/schools/nursery-school-kindergarten/index.aspx
Remember, this is the same person that calls a great number of OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN [those subject to his school closings and rheephorm experiments] “uneducables.”
If you’re asking “Where is the rigor? Where is the grit? What about all that Common Core stuff?” then I think—
You shouldn’t be holding your breath for an answer. Eternity is a long time to be stopping the intake of oxygen.
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As often as we raise the comparison between the education the reformsters choose for their own children and that which they would force on the children of everyone else, I have yet to hear a single response/explanation from the reformster crowd. Why is that?
2old2teach: another fan of Ionesco’s—
“It is not the answer that enlightens, but the question.”
Well posed.
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“I fear for these young children who are being brought up in a state of anxiety”
Not only the kids but the parents as well. I remember my conversations with parents as we were waiting to pick our kids up from kindergarten. Several of them were contemplating to take their kids elsewhere since the kids were not learning enough math.
Their worries were not exactly unfounded: they told me, many schools have entrance examinations, and if kids do not perform well, the schools won’t take them.
This was more than 10 years ago, so this craziness about reading and math in kindergarten doesn’t appear to be new.
toold2teach, A good idea would be to compile a list that would show where the kids of Congress and billionaires go to school.
KrazyT – I have always been mesmerized by the quote from the Russian novel, “Solaris”: “There are no answers, there are only questions.”
We have a choice to make once and for all: between the empire and the
spiritual and physical salvation of our people. No road for the people will
ever be open unless the government completely gives up control over us or
any aspect of our lives. It has led the country into an abyss and it does not
know the way out.
— Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, as quoted by Pravda (1986)
Would someone PLEASE go into a Philadelphia Head Start classroom? The teachers are being forced to adhere to a curriculum that is inappropriate for young children. They are spending countless hours doing lesson plans that align to different standards, and constantly have to write and record what the children are doing and saying, taking away valuable teaching/learning time. It is harmful to children and teachers. I believe there is a script, and when an Educational Coordinator comes in, you are expected to be doing exactly what is on your lesson plan. Head Start in Phila has changed dramatically over the last few years, and not in a good way. I even think Pearson is involved with the testing…… In Preschool!!!!
Head Start in Phila has been “alive and well” for many, many years. It was one of the few places where young children were taught by”certified” teachers. Why ruin a good thing?
I know of one teacher who was told that she’s not allowed to do art projects with her children. Really!!!! Where is all of this coming from and why?????? Someone has to save our children from this insanity.
And if you refuse to comply…… They chew you up and spit you out. Sorry… Just the truth.
“and constantly have to write and record what the children are doing ”
I think the focus in ed reform on monitoring and recording everything children do and say is creepy. I feel sorry for these children. I think human beings-including children- have a right to some time where they aren’t being evaluated, monitored, poked and prodded.
Every second of every day. Enough. Back off, adults. The freaking world won’t end if they’re permitted to wander a bit.
I wonder if there will be some kind of opposition to it from the students themselves when these children continue in the system. I think it’s almost inevitable. I hope so. I would cheer them on.
Data freaks need an adult to give them limits, because there is never enough data in that way of thinking. Ed reform doesn’t seem to have anyone in power who yells “STOP!”, someone who has the ability to impose or model restraint.
Chiara: with this proviso—
When it comes to OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN, rheephormsters profoundly believe that they can’t manage what they can’t measure. In plain practical terms, that means they can’t mismanage what they can’t track and record.
For THEIR OWN CHILDREN: see my above comment.
Thank you for your comments.
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Helene… yes indeed. Teachers have to record everything not only to appease lock-step thinking expected by anonymous bureaucrats. They have to do so to remain teachers because of the student learn objectives and the need to show student “growth” in very regimented ways. A large component of this regimented process entails “showing” reflection and analysis on the students’ part. Really? Head-start and pre-k in this stage of development? Yes.. and instead of spending time circulating the room and engaging students in genuine conversation… teachers circulate the room with an I-pad or pencil and paper in hand documenting data from lock step rubrics. Mutli tasking in this manner basically means a teacher is not TRULY PRESENT with his/her students. You cannot be in a constant state of “jotting down” very off-track and specific data for data’s sake and be interacting genuinely with your students.
“You cannot be in a constant state of “jotting down” very off-track and specific data for data’s sake and be interacting genuinely with your students.”
Oh, I am so glad to hear you say that! I never was able to master this multitasking crap and quickly forgot/abandoned my data recording for interacting with the kids. It was so incredibly disruptive to the flow of a class. At one of my schools, they wanted us to type up the IEP while the meeting was occurring and have it ready to publish by the end of the meeting. Seriously?! They were also paranoid about making sure it was letter perfect because it was a district of litigious, high power parents. Somehow I managed to skirt that impossible demand; I think it seemed obvious to even those who wrote the policy that requiring the teacher to both lead the meeting and be a secretary was ludicrous. The policy came in around the same time that they got laptops for all the special ed teachers. Someone had grandiose ideas about what computers would allow teachers to do. Apparently they still do.
Trying to introduce reading too early is the direct result of our test obsessed climate and the preoccupation with “career ready” employees. Some children read early on their own, and that’s fine. Trying to force readiness is like trying to teach a seven month old to walk. Who know what damage may be done to children’s self esteem with this bad practice?
I have seen young children shut down over this. When you force a child into academics too soon you will see increased aggressive behavior and less learning. Some children who cannot keep up with this pace label themselves as stupid. Now they believe they can’t learn and refuse to try. Getting them back on track is a painful and arduous practice for the child, parents and teacher/s.
These are the results of poor decisions from politicians and economists dictating policy on education. They are clueless about child development.
We all love to read in my family, except my now 14 year old son. He hates it. I blame it on the early reading focus and the insistence on speed reading in 3rd and 4th grade for this. It makes me so angry.
KrazyTA
October 10, 2015 at 10:44 am
Chiara: with this proviso—
When it comes to OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN, rheephormsters profoundly believe that they can’t manage what they can’t measure. ”
Right, I agree, but data people are like that. They got to extremes. It’s the same in the private sector. If they are permitted to go crazy they will collect more and more and more because that’s the only way they understand the world.
The idea is for someone to pull them up short and tell them “enough- you can’t have any more- we have other things we make a priority here”. That never happens in ed reform. The data-worship culture is so strong there’s no moderating influence, or people don’t know they can say “enough”, because they don’t really understand why they’re collecting all this data.
It has taken about 10 years, but the trickle down testing madness has reached preK and kindergarten in my district. It started with testing 4th graders, then they moved the hard line to 3rd grade with automatic retention. Then the 3rd grade teachers started putting the pressure on 2nd grade teachers to deliver better automaton test takers, and so on right down to the 4 and 5 year old’s. Districts are retaining kindergartners because they can’t read – SICKENING!
While it is true that this is all state sponsored, there is plenty of blame for the teachers. Even when faced with research contradicting this madness, most teachers simply shrug their shoulders and continue to commit educational malpractice on their students.
A big cheese just came through our K classrooms, and was VERY UNHAPPY with what she saw – 5 year olds tracing and cutting (developing fine motor skills)leaves out of paper they had sponge painted (exposure to many mediums in art), and then glued their leaves to a paper with a number symbol, matching the correct number of objects to the digit (culminating activity for children will recognize and count accurately numbers 1-5). Sounds kinda fun, right? But big cheese and minion thought it was a big waste of time. When I pointed out many standards covered in the lesson, they relented somewhat, but boss-splained it should have been done in the afternoon – five year olds should spend all morning on the serious subject of instruction and drill. I was incensed at the lack of knowledge and understanding of how children learn. This is the real life stupidity teachers are trying to mitigate, only to get called in to explain ourselves.
It seems that those who wrote an indemnification clause into the CC$$ were either prescient or knew that it was developmentally inappropriate for the early grades. Not only aware test questions field tested, the entire set of standards seems to be similarly provisional in spite of all the claims to the contrary.
Are, not aware. I HATE Apples autocorrect.
Reblogged this on Politicians Are Poody Heads.
I have been a public school teacher for 20 years. I believe in public education, but if I had a young child I would not send her to public school. I realize everyone doesn’t have that option, so rich kids get sent to private schools and poor kids get their childhood taken from them.
Dr’s John Ratey, Carla Hannaford, John Medina, Arlene Taylor, Ken Cooper, Eric Jensen, the late Phil Lawler, Jean Blaydes-Moize, Cathy Sumlmerford and most physical educators that I know have been saying this for years and years. Play IS the work for young children and the period in their lives when they develop critical thinking skills. Stop all this early childhood academic rigor crap and we’ll stop producing angry, frustrated, impatient, socially unskilled children who do not do well academically or socially and a handful who go out and do unspeakable acts. Of course that takes the profit away from Pearson, Eli Broad, Bill Gates and all the others.
The Summer Sessions at Brooklyn College and Queens College, held in August, were a requirement for Directors of Pre-K programs, as well as for public school teachers. There we learned “Analyzing Data and Assessment” for the DOE’s U Pre-K program. The main idea was to introduce us to Curriculum Gold Data Assessment, where the teacher inputs observation notes on two students per day, on a shiny new computer or tablet. We were “trained” to upload their work, pictures of them, and VIDEOS of the children. Of course, at enrollment, the parents were given lovely photo release forms to fill out. Carmen Farina led the keynote address. In my group, I asked where this data was being sent to – Pearson? Who owns the data? I also expressed that I felt it was very creepy to take video of the children and upload it. I said I wouldn’t do it. In 20 years, I’m sure some children will get wise to this and sue. The teachers are being permanently tracked with this method, as well.
It is not just the pre-empting of early childhood education with ”academics.”
There is a move to make “social-emotional” learning more like an academic study, complete with standards and “performance objectives” for understanding and behavior, and outcomes described as “social-emotional competencies.”
Illinois adopted formal standards in 2004 and expanded these to preschool in 2013.
Most of the competencies strike me as aimed at impulse control, getting students to give the right answers to questions about the importance of going to school, being “successful” with academics, and living a goal-directed well-managed life. Not an ounce of serendipity, exuberance, poetic reflection.
The standards actually say more about the values of the adults who wrote the standards and their inability to escape from “education-eze of the day” and jargon from behavioral psychology.
Some of the competencies strike me as absurd, a product of sloppy thinking.
Here are the general goals and K-3 competencies to be sought by teachers of Illinois children.
Goal 1: Develop self-awareness and self-management skills to achieve school and life success.
1A.1a. Recognize and accurately label emotions and how they are linked to behavior.
1A.1b. Demonstrate control of impulsive behavior.
1B.1a. Identify one’s likes and dislikes, needs and wants, strengths and challenges.
1B.1b. Identify family, peer, school, and community strengths.
1C.1a. Describe why school is important in helping students achieve personal goals.
1C.1b. Identify goals for academic success and classroom behavior.
Goal 2: Use social-awareness and interpersonal skills to establish and maintain positive relationships.
2A.1a. Recognize that others may experience situations differently from oneself.
2A.1b. Use listening skills to identify the feelings and perspectives of others.
2B.1a. Describe the ways that people are similar and different.
2B.1b. Describe positive qualities in others.
2C.1a. Identify ways to work and play well with others.
2C.1b. Demonstrate appropriate social and classroom behavior.
2D.1a. Identify problems and conflicts commonly experienced by peers.
2D.1b. Identify approaches to resolving conflicts constructively.
Goal 3: Demonstrate decision-making skills and responsible behaviors in personal, school, and community contexts.
3A.1a. Explain why unprovoked acts that hurt others are wrong.
3A.1b. Identify social norms and safety considerations that guide behavior.
3B.1a. Identify a range of decisions that students make at school.
3B.1b. Make positive choices when interacting with classmates.
3C.1a. Identify and perform roles that contribute to one’s classroom.
3C.1b. Identify and perform roles that contribute to one’s family.
I found a list of 11 emotions on the internet each followed with at least 25 words from a thesaurus, reasonable proof that “accurate labeling of emotion” is an absurd expectation for K-3 and a challenge taken on by great writers and poets who do not have the audacity call their efforts “accurate.” If you think these “competencies” call for an early introduction to psychoanalysis, you should look at the competencies for middle and high schools.
See for yourself
http://www.isbe.net/ils/social_emotional/standards.htm
I find the whole sudden focus on social emotional development rather amusing. They have spent the last ten years telling us all those mushy feeling things don’t matter. Now, when they find themselves faced with angry, isolated, sullen, sad, and frustrated, school resistant children, they suddenly see the need for admitting that feelings might matter! That they can’t deny the impact through regimenting the schools? What do they do? Task analysis! They try to reduce social and emotional development to a series of performance criteria. Now what was normally a focus of good preschool programs through play and group activities has turned into a data collection project. Teachers throughout the elementary grades knew that part of their job was to guide children through the social emotional challenges of their age cohort. The same task continues, with more student independence, at the high school level through extracurricular activities as well as in the classroom.
I can’t see that this reform effort has added any insights to what we already knew and, in the case of low socioeconomic communities, chose to ignore.
Parents have played a role in the demise of traditional kindergarten. In the 1970’s, children went to ‘nursery’ school to play all day, not to ‘pre-school/K’ learn to write. Maybe it’s just semantics but I wonder why the name was changed?
My experience is that parents expect that their children will learn to read in K and many actually complain after a few weeks into school that their child is bored because everything is a review. My guess is play time would take care of boredom.
See my comment above: this paranoia of kids not learning enough in kindergarten or even before doesn’t seem to be new at all.
I do not see how things will change for the better without a philosophical change. Unless we understand that maintaining children’s motivation to learn is more important than anything else, the “more kids learn the better” camp will win.
Analysis might work, if the task of analysis was to focus on the
“signal” rather than the “noise”. The ongoing “noise” continues
to hide the MAIN “signal”. COMPLICITY is required for the
continuation of negligent actions.
” Stop all this early childhood academic rigor crap”
Why only early childhood? One of the mistakes of the Common Core reading standards is the emphasis on reading more and more non-fiction in K-12.
There is no requirement for ‘rigor’ or standardized tests in the common core. Much (all?) of the CC standards for that age could and should be done in the context of play and exploration. It’s unfortunate they’ve tied the testing so closely to the standards. The standards aren’t expecting anything unreasonable. But the approach many are taking to it is unreasonable.
Why should there be any federal standards to that age at all?
Reblogged this on Creative Delaware and commented:
OMG. There is a process to learning; it’s not all about the product….