What makes a child ready?
by Susan Schwartz, M.A. Ed. (www.aboutourkids.org)
Although Kindergarten marks the official start of formal school, children have really been getting ready since they were born. Through their interactions with family, caregivers and friends - the people around them - they have been learning some important readiness skills, such as being responsive to others, becoming curious about the world around them and developing an eagerness to master new abilities. In addition, they have learned that they are distinct individuals who engage in activities separate and apart from their parents, caregivers and siblings. In Kindergarten programs that are developmentally oriented, language, cognitive, sensory motor, and social-emotional skills are strengthened through play and systematic, planned opportunities.In other cases, Kindergarten programs assume all children are equally ready and can resemble an instructional style used in the lower elementary school grades. Children sit at tables and teachers use structured whole-class instruction and paper-and-pencil activities based on reading and math readiness activities. This type of academically-focused program is not always the best match for a child who is learning slowly or for a child who is advanced. All children learn by doing and often make the most progress with hands-on learning experiences as recommended by early childhood educational and mental health professionals.
The child entering Kindergarten should have, or be in the process of achieving, competence in the following areas:
The child should be working towards or be able to:
The child should be working toward or be able to:
The child should be working toward or be able to:
The child should be working toward or be able to:
The child should be working toward or be able to:
The child should be working toward or be able to:
In summary, Kindergarten readiness depends on an individual child's developmental pattern and whether it is consistent with the expectations of the Kindergarten program.
Some Kindergarten teachers assign homework, such as picking a book the child can look at or that parents or caregivers can read to the child or finding pictures of objects that start with a specific letter. When school starts, find out whether there will be homework and how involved you should be in helping your child to complete the assignments. Homework should take the child no more than 15 to 20 minutes; if it takes longer, contact the teacher to determine whether the work is appropriate or if the child is having some difficulty that should be monitored.
Play games and provide activities that promote reasoning and problem-solving skills. For example, cook and bake together and discuss amounts of ingredients and how combining them results in changes, emphasizing cause-and-effect relationships. Common household tasks such as sorting socks, stacking the dishwater, setting the table and peeling vegetables promote classification and number concepts as well as fine motor development. Read books and watch television shows together and talk about the stories, how characters feel and act, the sequence of events and how people's actions affect outcomes. Sing songs and play rhyming games to develop sound awareness, which are reading readiness skills. Make activities short so that children can focus and see them through to completion.
Cooperation and communication between the Kindergarten staff and children's homes will ensure that children's Kindergarten years enhance their social/emotional, language and cognitive development and serve as a strong foundation for the school years to follow.