Getting Ready for Kindergarten
Collapse
X
-
-
I agree with you about the kinder thing, but every state has different requirements. In CA you need to be able to write your first middle and last name. Count to 20, count 10 objects, know site and sound all letters of the alphabet both upper and lower case.
Math. Children need to know very basic algebra. For example if there is a pie cut into 4, one piece is missing, they need to know 1/4 of the pie is missing.
There's a lot more. Here I don't think a child could go straight to kinder without proper preparation.
In CA they say that the new kinder is the old first grade.- Flag
-
I agree with you about the kinder thing, but every state has different requirements. In CA you need to be able to write your first middle and last name. Count to 20, count 10 objects, know site and sound all letters of the alphabet both upper and lower case.
Math. Children need to know very basic algebra. For example if there is a pie cut into 4, one piece is missing, they need to know 1/4 of the pie is missing.
There's a lot more. Here I don't think a child could go straight to kinder without proper preparation.
In CA they say that the new kinder is the old first grade.If I am not paid to teach the children these things, I do not feel I should be required to do it...kwim? The state cannot require children to learn this stuff from a child care provider unless they are some how compensating you to do so.
May or may not be true, but that is my opinion on the subject. There are many providers from Cali on this forum and you all do things very differently so I can't see how your state could require the kids to know this stuff, at least not at the hands of a child care provider...not unless they are training you in how to do it.
FWIW~ 99.9% of my kiddos do that stuff before they head to school. I just do not teach it in a structured curriculum manner. I have the teaching degree and know "how" to teach the kids as a Kindy teacher would but I am licensed as a family child care provider so I provide care. Nothing more and nothing less. The care I provide however, offers many learning opportunities and experiences for the children.
Which further makes my point...if the environment is correct (or develomentally appropriate), the learning comes naturally.Last edited by Blackcat31; 02-14-2012, 09:09 AM.- Flag
Comment
-
Thanks, Blackcat. I do that too. However, our local Kindergartens require that they know the following before entering...(This is just part of the list).....The first few are no problem in my daycare. The rest, for those, how are they suppose to learn them without a preschool? Maybe, just having littles, I don't see them learning it through just play in our daycares. I just don't ever, want to hold a kid back from learning.
Use self help skills (button, zip etc.)
Listen to stories
Play with rhyme
Use materials, tools (lego, play-doh, scissors, crayons, etc.)
recognize some letters of the alphabet
Recognize their first name in print and write them
Make marks and pictures that look like writing
Count objects to 10
count aloud to 20
recognize numbers 0-10
Write number 0-5
Make set of objects (ex: 8 blocks)
Sort by color, size shape.
Identify colors
Identify shapes
use pairs of opposite words (big/little, hot/cold)
Follow simple directions
Use numbers that have personal meaning to them (phone number, address, birthday, age)
Identify patterns
Practice and understnadscience lab safety
Identify seasons, weather, temperature
Remember, this is only about half the list. My question is. If we aren't doing preschool (and I don't) How are we expect these kids to be ready for Kindergarten, straight from us? How do your kids "learn" all these things just through play? What am I not preparing for? (Right now, mine are all just learning to talk LOL).- Flag
Comment
-
I agree with you about the kinder thing, but every state has different requirements. In CA you need to be able to write your first middle and last name. Count to 20, count 10 objects, know site and sound all letters of the alphabet both upper and lower case.
Math. Children need to know very basic algebra. For example if there is a pie cut into 4, one piece is missing, they need to know 1/4 of the pie is missing.
There's a lot more. Here I don't think a child could go straight to kinder without proper preparation.
In CA they say that the new kinder is the old first grade.
before they let you attend kindergarten?????? or they earn that in kindergarten?
as far as the wrong way to teach a child to write their name... do not worry about that. just teach lower case letters and only one Capital. the method of hand writing is easily changed.
For active boys have safe things to do. lots of active play jump dance roll aroundIt:: will wait
- Flag
Comment
-
I agree with you about the kinder thing, but every state has different requirements. In CA you need to be able to write your first middle and last name. Count to 20, count 10 objects, know site and sound all letters of the alphabet both upper and lower case.
Math. Children need to know very basic algebra. For example if there is a pie cut into 4, one piece is missing, they need to know 1/4 of the pie is missing.
There's a lot more. Here I don't think a child could go straight to kinder without proper preparation.
In CA they say that the new kinder is the old first grade.
As far as parents teaching them, many parents are unaware that they need to learn all these things before entering. Many think it is a social place of learning, with basic academics. There was a big shift between my first three and my last one in kindergarten. My first ones had tubs of stuff they brought home over the year (art work, special projects, special day things). My last one may had a fourth of a file box of things they did. It was very sad-Each day is a fresh start
Never look back on regrets
Live life to the fullest
We only get one shot at this!!
- Flag
Comment
-
Somehow "Kindergarten preparation" has become a huge deal in early childhood. Somehow our country has been led to believe that the children must be made ready for Kindergarten when in fact Kindergarten should be made ready for the children.
Even if we accept the status quo, it is still impossible to make sense of long lists of "readiness skills." If an eligible 5 year old does not have these skills should he or she be deemed unready and not be allowed to enroll? If the answer to that is yes, then what happens to this child? They spend another year in preschool/child care/sitting at home and show up again the next year. What if he or she still doesn't have those skills? A public school cannot turn away a child once they reach the mandatory enrollment age. In NY for example, the mandatory enrollment age is 6 though most children attend Kindergarten at age 5. If a six year old "fails" the readiness test, they still must be enrolled by law. All teachers must teach a wide range of abilities, so why bother determining who is "ready." All children should enroll, be screened, and then taught based on their skills and abilities. Some children are lucky enough to have parents/caregivers/teachers as young children who read to them, talk to them, and engage them in stimulating experiences thus allowing them to gain necessary skills. Not all children are this lucky. Should they then be further hurt by being deemed unready for PUBLIC school?
Ok, sorry. This topic just makes my blood boil!- Flag
Comment
-
I agree with you about the kinder thing, but every state has different requirements. In CA you need to be able to write your first middle and last name. Count to 20, count 10 objects, know site and sound all letters of the alphabet both upper and lower case.
Math. Children need to know very basic algebra. For example if there is a pie cut into 4, one piece is missing, they need to know 1/4 of the pie is missing.
There's a lot more. Here I don't think a child could go straight to kinder without proper preparation.
In CA they say that the new kinder is the old first grade.- Flag
Comment
-
That's where parents come in.If I am not paid to teach the children these things, I do not feel I should be required to do it...kwim? The state cannot require children to learn this stuff from a child care provider unless they are some how compensating you to do so.
May or may not be true, but that is my opinion on the subject. There are many providers from Cali on this forum and you all do things very differently so I can't see how your state could require the kids to know this stuff, at least not at the hands of a child care provider...not unless they are training you in how to do it.
FWIW~ 99.9% of my kiddos do that stuff before they head to school. I just do not teach it in a structured curriculum manner. I have the teaching degree and know "how" to teach the kids as a Kindy teacher would but I am licensed as a family child care provider so I provide care. Nothing more and nothing less. The care I provide however, offers many learning opportunities and experiences for the children.
Which further makes my point...if the environment is correct (or develomentally appropriate), the learning comes naturally.
I looked up my states pre-k standards, and showed my parents (on my blog) how we meet each and every one of them through PLAY.
You'd be amazed by what they are learning by just offering meaningful, relevant, and purposeful experiences everyday.- Flag
Comment
-
Thanks, Blackcat. I do that too. However, our local Kindergartens require that they know the following before entering...(This is just part of the list).....The first few are no problem in my daycare. The rest, for those, how are they suppose to learn them without a preschool? Maybe, just having littles, I don't see them learning it through just play in our daycares. I just don't ever, want to hold a kid back from learning.
Use self help skills (button, zip etc.)
Listen to stories
Play with rhyme
Use materials, tools (lego, play-doh, scissors, crayons, etc.)
recognize some letters of the alphabet
Recognize their first name in print and write them
Make marks and pictures that look like writing
Count objects to 10
count aloud to 20
recognize numbers 0-10
Write number 0-5
Make set of objects (ex: 8 blocks)
Sort by color, size shape.
Identify colors
Identify shapes
use pairs of opposite words (big/little, hot/cold)
Follow simple directions
Use numbers that have personal meaning to them (phone number, address, birthday, age)
Identify patterns
Practice and understnadscience lab safety
Identify seasons, weather, temperature
Remember, this is only about half the list. My question is. If we aren't doing preschool (and I don't) How are we expect these kids to be ready for Kindergarten, straight from us? How do your kids "learn" all these things just through play? What am I not preparing for? (Right now, mine are all just learning to talk LOL).
Does anyone in any state that has Kindergarten educational standards REQUIREMENTS for entry please post a link to the actual law or regulation.
I am absolutely SHOCKED to hear there are states REQUIRING it meaning if the child does not have these skills they can't go into kindergarten. That's what I'm after... showing what the law is and the consequence for the child's enrollment into public school if they don't have it.
Not private... just public school please.
I wonder when I read these kinds of posts if there isn't a possiblity that the state is saying this is what they WANT the kids to have but not that they MUST in order to attend kindergarten. In my state the state law REQUIRES allowance into kindergarten at age five (by september 15th of that school year) with absolutely NO......... none........... zero qualifiers except being born by that day and being at least five. If the child is six by sept fifteenth and they haven't been enrolled in school you are breaking the law. You have to enroll them in the school by this age or prove you are homeschooling them.
I can't imagine the lawsuits in my state if one of the schools didn't allow a child into kindy because the didn't have these skills. Even ONE of them being required would start lawsuits to the point the district would be bankrupt in a couple of years.
We have kids entering out schools who don't speak a word of english, aren't potty tranined, and have serious behavioral and mental health issues and they can't refuse them entry into kindergarten. Now they may end up in special classes or get a treatment plan for whatever they have issues with but if they aren't causing a harm to themselves or others they are in with NO prerequisites.- Flag
Comment
-
I got it from my school district website... BTW my school district is currently a PI school and is on state take over...Our requirements may be different than other counties because of this.- Flag
Comment
-
- Flag
Comment
-
Can you post the law or where the state says this is a requirement to enter kindergarten?
Does anyone in any state that has Kindergarten educational standards REQUIREMENTS for entry please post a link to the actual law or regulation.
I am absolutely SHOCKED to hear there are states REQUIRING it meaning if the child does not have these skills they can't go into kindergarten. That's what I'm after... showing what the law is and the consequence for the child's enrollment into public school if they don't have it.
Not private... just public school please.
I wonder when I read these kinds of posts if there isn't a possiblity that the state is saying this is what they WANT the kids to have but not that they MUST in order to attend kindergarten. In my state the state law REQUIRES allowance into kindergarten at age five (by september 15th of that school year) with absolutely NO......... none........... zero qualifiers except being born by that day and being at least five. If the child is six by sept fifteenth and they haven't been enrolled in school you are breaking the law. You have to enroll them in the school by this age or prove you are homeschooling them.
I can't imagine the lawsuits in my state if one of the schools didn't allow a child into kindy because the didn't have these skills. Even ONE of them being required would start lawsuits to the point the district would be bankrupt in a couple of years.
We have kids entering out schools who don't speak a word of english, aren't potty tranined, and have serious behavioral and mental health issues and they can't refuse them entry into kindergarten. Now they may end up in special classes or get a treatment plan for whatever they have issues with but if they aren't causing a harm to themselves or others they are in with NO prerequisites.- Flag
Comment
-
I do not have a "law" that states this. My kids are all grown. I'm getting this off of a sheet a parent had when her oldest DD was getting ready for kindergarten. (I had the younger sibling)
To me, Prerequisites and Requirements are the same thing.
The sheet states:
Prerequisites: Before entering kindergarten, students should be able to.......then goes on to list 4 pages of stuff, including the things they will learn "during" kindergarten.
This sheet does state "should". However, we all know the kid that comes in "not" knowing those things will be considered behind. I just wouldn't want any child from my daycare going in behind.
Since I do not consider myself a teacher. I feel they should move to a larger center at age 4. Since most have been with me since 6-8 weeks, by then I have taught them the basics of behavior and how to treat others etc. It is time for someone else to teach the numbers, letters etc.- Flag
Comment
Comment