Defending the Early Years
Response to Le, Schaack et al. study, “Advanced Content Coverage at Kindergarten: Are There Trade-Offs Between Academic Achievement and Social-Emotional Skills?”
https://www.chalkbeat.org/posts/us/2019/01/24/advanced-academic-content-kindergarten-study/
Advanced academics in kindergarten?
Questionable science and a misleading news story
“New research says the kids are all right” in kindergartens that emphasize advanced academics, according to a January 24 headline in Chalkbeat.We strongly disagree.
The study in question, published online by the American Educational Research Journalon Jan. 4, 2019, has severe limitations, and it is based on so many questionable assumptions that no meaningful conclusion can be drawn from it. At the same time, reports of its supposed findings, like the Chalkbeatstory, muddy the waters of a vital conversation about how young children learn. Even worse, this problematic study and the uncritical reporting of it are likely to be used to defend pernicious policies and practices that almost all early childhood educators agree are hurting children.
The authors of the study themselves acknowledge three serious limitations in their work. First, it is a correlational study that says nothing about causation. In other words, the positive outcomes that they claim to see may be the result of factors other than the ones they tried to measure. Second, the measure they used to calculate the amount of time devoted to teaching advanced skills in the classroom was subject to a high level of uncertainty. And third, the very definition of “advanced” has widely varying meanings, and the researchers had no way of knowing how such “advanced” content was actually being taught.
In fact, this study is flawed in even more troubling ways:
- The tests that were used to measure changes in children’s achievement and social-emotional skills were given in the same year: “At kindergarten,” the authors write, “there were two waves of data collection, with the first wave taking place during the fall and the second wave taking place during spring.” That is, there was no follow-up beyond the kindergarten year. The authors fail to acknowledge that long-term studies have shown that gains from early academics disappear and in some cases reverse themselves by third grade.
That drilling children on content can boost test scores in the same year (which happened here only to a moderate extent) is thus unsurprising and means little. The authors avoid mentioning that, while their study was just correlational, other experimental research contradicts their conclusion. The most rigorous of these was the High/Scope Comparative Curriculum Study, which followed students to age 23 and found powerful evidence of the negative effects of early academics—evidence that did not clearly emerge until years later.
- The authors based their conclusions on kindergartners’ test scores in math and English language arts. They note that, in the standards-and-testing-based “reform” movement of the 1980s and 1990s, “standardized testing was not mandated until the third grade.” But they don’t say why. The reason is that testing experts universally agree that standardized test scores have virtually no meaning before third grade. According to the findings of the National Research Council’s definitive “High Stakes” study, basing educational policymaking on kindergarten test scores is essentially a form of educational malpractice.
- In their review of the research on early academics, the authors make no mention of the fact that no study has ever shown that learning to read at an early age is correlated with long-term academic success. Indeed, children who learn to read at age six or seven are just as likely to become devoted lifelong readers as those who learn at four or five. Shouldn’t lifelong learning, not short-term test results, be our goal as teachers?
- The study found a correlation between academic training and social-emotional development—but only with math, not language arts, and these social-emotional gains were seen almost entirely in the children who started kindergarten with the lowest math achievement scores. The authors offer no convincing explanation for this odd, counterintuitive finding. It suggests to us the presence of a confounding variable unrelated to the hypothesis that advanced academic training of little children would improve their social-emotional well-being.
- A close look at how this study measured social-emotional outcomes reveals what may be its most serious flaw. All the social skills and behavioral effects were rated by the same teachers who taught the academic content, not by independent evaluators (let alone by independent evaluators blind to the type of instruction).
“Of 12 social or behavioral measures, there was a statistically significant (and quite small) effect on only three,” writes education policy analyst Alfie Kohn. “And with respect to kids’ aggression, anger, sadness, anxiety, etc., there was no short-term effect, positive or negative, as a result of teaching academic skills for an unspecified length of time using unspecified methods—according to the teachers themselves.”
Behaviors that would get you a low social-emotional skills score in this study—like not putting your toys away promptly or acting out—are more likely to occur in play. Those that would get you a high score—like completing tasks and following rules—are more likely to occur in a highly structured academic classroom. With this rating system, therefore, children in kindergartens with a lot of free play might, for that very reason, look like they have lower social-emotional skills than children in kindergartens where behavior is more rigidly structured and controlled by the teacher.
The authors fail to acknowledge what every wise teacher understands: kids learn to be better adjusted through play. “Those kids in lessons, with less play,” writes Boston College Research Professor Peter Gray, “don’t have the opportunity to exhibit the kinds of behaviors that (a) would lead to low social-emotional scores and (b) would provide the experiences needed to gain social-emotional competence. If we rigidly control children they may look more competent than if we allow them free play, but we also prevent them from learning to control themselves through experience.”
The authors’ conclusion, “that advanced academic content can be taught without compromising children’s social-emotional skills,” is not just unsupported by their own evidence. It is irresponsible in light of convincing contradictory findings that they have completely ignored.
This study will undoubtedly be welcomed by the corporations producing new academically oriented curricula and tests for young children. It is likely to further the proliferation of high-pressure academics and the loss of free play and child-initiated learning in kindergarten—trends that have already led some of our most experienced and talented early childhood teachers to quit the profession in frustration and despair.
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This statement was prepared by Defending the Early Years in consultation with early childhood researchers, practitioners, and advocates. We are especially grateful for the assistance of Alfie Kohn, Joan Almon, and Professor Peter Gray. For more information, contact Geralyn Bywater McLaughlin (geralynbywater@gmail.com) or Blakely Bundy (blakelybundy@comcast.net).

Alabama has a state-wide pre-k program that needs to be shared-out widely. This red state has educators allying with business to make it happen. Take a look here: https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2019/01/alabama-serious-investment-pre-k-education-paying-off/
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Terrific. Experiential, hands-on learning makes a difference. Love the article, pauleck47. Thank you.
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In reference to the Mother Jones article, as human beings why do we permit pre-school children to be defined in terms of “return on investment”?
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The question I have regarding this flawed study is who is funding this? It seems like they started with the conclusion and tried to plug in a justification for the results, and perhaps this is why the so-called study fails the “sniff test.” I found the Defending the Early years rebuttal to the Chalkbeat article, and the final paragraph suggests the motives for the so-called study.
“This study will undoubtedly be welcomed by the corporations producing new academically oriented curricula and tests for young children. It is likely to further the proliferation of high-pressure academics and the loss of free play and child-initiated learning in kindergarten—trends that have already led some of our most experienced and talented early childhood teachers to quit the profession in frustration and despair.”
The “research” was conducted to justify the marketing of rigorous content for preschool students that will soon be available. When students balk at the developmentally inappropriate materials, preschools should believe that they are contributing to the social and emotional development of students. This flawed research is seriously devious and twisted.https://www.deyproject.org/rapid-response-network/defending-the-early-years-response-to-le-schaack-et-al-study-advanced-content-coverage-at-kindergarten-are-there-trade-offs-between-academic-achievement-and-social-emotional-skills
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retired teacher,
Your concerns are same as mine re: Polis and his kindergarten initiative in CO.
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Polis and his likely push for a Pay For Success “prove success through testing” views…
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NIH funded the study. The NIH Director’s Blog has a page titled “Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation”. The amount of separation between the two is anyone’s guess.
The researcher for the kindergarten rigor study, who is not at NORC, does not have a resume posted at her employer’s site. If the resume was available citizens could identify her prior affiliations.
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BREAKING NEWS!!!!! Intensive test prep for some types of tests improves, very, very slightly, outcomes on those types of tests and has other “benefits” if, that is, one misrepresents or ignores consequential factors affecting those “benefits” and any long-term effects of such disruption of normal childhood development.
LMAO. This is the kind of nonsense that passes for research in a time when researchers’ souls are routinely purchased by billionaire education deformers to add to their collection of state and federal legislative bobbleheads.
One doesn’t have to look hard to find Vichy collaborators with Education Deform. Simply follow the money trails into academia.
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It strikes me that the Vichy reference probably flies right over the collective heads of the people being characterized.
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The Vichy metaphor is strong but right on the money. There are so many people in education at all levels that have bought into the reform idea of teach and test, then repeat. They are afraid to argue with you, so they hide behind the idea that “that is the game we are playing now” as though this is all a game. Like the Vichy French, they have bought into the idea wholesale but are afraid to,admit it.
And you are right, Greg, the metaphor flew right over, I bet.
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You can apply this metaphor to the pile of evidence that many here claim signifies the death throes of the privatizers. Any power structure that knows its days are limited tries to stretch them out. In this case, they got money. No arguments anymore, just money, and that translates to power.
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Greg, absolutely right. If the money disappeared, so would the “movement.”
There is no movement, just a bunch of billionaires buying people.
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And everyone wonders why we have teenagers grabbing guns and storming school buildings? If teens have never learned HOW to solve conflict when they were young, they will look for the easiest way they think will solve the problem. If kids don’t learn HOW to deal with bully like behavior, there will be more bullies AND there will be more unhappy kids looking for the easiest way to solve the problem. Children learn so many life skills when they are allowed to play and argue freely among themselves without the constant oversight of adults correcting and nit picking every single behavior. Let them play! Bring back unstructured recess! This bit of “research” is just another paid advertisement for those trying to make a buck off the backs of children. These “researchers” should be exposed for the charlatans that they are.
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Exactly. We have students in the same classroom who are in SILOS re: that screen.
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What do teachers think of “college in high school” programs?
Our public school sold this hard, and now they’re pulling back a little because a lot of the kids who have tried it can’t handle it for various reasons- immaturity being one of them, and another one being that it puts 15 year olds in with 18 to 21 year olds and 15 year olds are very different than 21 year olds. So, the “social” aspect. The kids say they are lonely and they want to be with people their own age.
It’s hard to resist as a parent because they sell it so hard to students that it’s like you’re “holding back” your 16 year old – they seem to have induced a kind of panic among high school students, where if they aren’t taking college courses when they’re 16 they will fall behind and never get a job. I wonder if this is wise.
It seems like yet another idea adults came up with very little thought to how kids OPERATE in school- how it’s their environment. A huge part of their lives. It’s “education as a menu of purchased services” which is a very ADULT concept. Can’t they just grow up in high school? Isn’t that part of what they’re doing in school?
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As a general rule, very little good comes from rushing, speeding, or accelerating. Can’t we all R-E-L-A-X and let kids be kids?
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We have this a lot in our wealthy district. The parents love it but the kids are pretty unhappy. The driving force for this in our district is overcrowding at the high school level. There is very little land left to build new HS’s in the overcrowded areas and the parents in this district go absolutely insane when they put redistricting on the agenda….as in having to have police at school board meetings and having threats sent to people sitting on redistricting committees. I think children should be allowed to be children.
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I think they are stupid.
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Chaira: you bring up an interesting trend. Our way it is dual credit classes that are pushed. Get college credit while you are in high school. My question is simple: why do we in society want to teach the best and the brightest half as much? If these children are the best, they should be asked to do twice the work, not half of it. Politicians see this as a way we can cut back on money spent for general Ed courses. Are
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I read this ed reform “think tank” stuff, and the US Department of Education, and it’s like these people were never 15.
“Why do we have GRADE LEVELS?” as if we have those just because we’re really dumb and no one ever thought it about it before.
Part of why we have grade levels is 15 year olds aren’t 21. They want to be with people their own age and in many cases they SHOULD be with people their own age, because they’re not as sophisticated as older people.
When we built a new school the majority of the parents wanted the elementary school apart from the high school. This makes sense! You would wonder if your 6th grader had a high school sophomore as a buddy. You would be cautious about that.
They’re not “the same”. They’re not just academic levels walking around as whole human beings. They’re actual people. They have a whole social side. My 16 year can probably pass a college math course. The question is do I want him in college at 16 and why are they telling him if he doesn’t do this he will be consigned to a low wage job forever? That’s nonsense. We all got to grow up. Why don’t they?
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Skeptics might suggest a study limited to the children of the wealthy would produce a
finding that rigor in kindergarten doesn’t work for them, which would give schools like Bill Gates’ Lakeside the mandate to differ its instruction from that of public schools.
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Diane Ravich: So glad you are on the right side of this with accurate information and clear understanding of children. I wish you would take that thoroughness with your ideas about charter schools. Thank you so much for “defending the early years.”
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Praise for Diane can not be too high nor said too often.
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