Laura Bornfreund
Senior Fellow, Early & Elementary Education
Play, Relationships, and Challenging Content
This blog post is the first in a series on Promoting Impactful Teaching and Learning in Kindergarten.
Kindergarten is an important year for children and their families. For some, it is their first experience in formal education. Some children may be away from their parents or caregiver for the first time. For those who attended an early childhood program, whether in a center, family childcare home, or with a care provider in the neighborhood, kindergarten may look and feel different than their previous experiences. While kindergarten is the first universal education access point for children, they bring diverse experiences and strengths to the classroom. And it鈥檚 incumbent on schools and educators to be ready for children regardless of what those experiences and strengths are.
Transitioning into kindergarten can be an intimidating experience for children and families unless kindergarten is a sturdy bridge that supports families and children through the transition, connecting what comes before and after, and regardless of the learning environments, they may have had. State leaders, district administrators, and kindergarten teachers themselves have an opportunity and an obligation to ensure equitable experiences for children and families through this transition, setting the stage for future growth and goal attainment. Ensuring equitable experiences requires implementing developmentally appropriate practices in kindergarten and addressing inequitable access to kindergarten for many children in this country.
If you attended kindergarten prior to the mid-1990s you may recall lots of play, singing, and graham crackers. Over the years, there has been a shift as kindergarten has become more structured and academic, with limited play and outdoor time. Children are often expected to sit at tables and complete worksheets and other rote close-ended activities. ), play is a critical component of early childhood and children's physical, social, and emotional development, yet play has largely disappeared in kindergarten.
Research has shown that children learn best when they are engaged in developmentally appropriate experiences and activities: play! A developmentally appropriate kindergarten environment can support children socially and emotionally and foster positive relationships with peers and adults. , 鈥…when educators neither prioritize these skills and mindsets nor integrate them with academic development, students are left without tools for engagement or a language for learning.鈥 Developmentally appropriate environments provide the building blocks to guide the development of executive functioning skills and support foundational literacy, language, and math skills while also providing opportunities for fine and gross motor development. By incorporating play and developmentally appropriate practice into the kindergarten environment, teachers can support all children as they continue to grow and develop during this critical time in their lives.
During a webinar co-sponsored by 麻豆果冻传媒 and Campaign for Grade-Level Reading webinar in October 2022, Ellen Galinsky, author of Mind in the Making, and Ryan Lee-James, Chief Academic Officer at the Atlanta Speech School, dug deeper into building executive function and children鈥檚 reading brain during the kindergarten year. Galinsky urged conversations about kindergarten readiness to move away from focusing on what kindergartners lack when they enter school and instead focus on the strengths they bring and how to then build from there. Schools must be ready for all children. Lee-James highlighted the importance of relationships for building a reading brain. She also discussed how COVID wreaked havoc on children鈥檚 learning but pointed out that schools struggled to meet all children鈥檚 needs, especially children from marginalized communities, before COVID. 鈥淲e need to do better for our young learners.鈥
A second webinar in November 2022, explored the most important research findings on teaching and learning in kindergarten. One panelist, Nell Duke, Executive Director of the Center for Early Literacy Success at Stand for Children, spoke about the importance of looking for opportunities for interdisciplinary instruction when you鈥檙e developing language. 鈥淲hen you鈥檙e developing literacy, you鈥檙e developing science and math,鈥 she said. Kathy Hirsch-Pasek, Professor at Temple University, raised how necessary it is to start 鈥渨ith the cultural values that are meaningful to the community that you鈥檙e working in.鈥 And, Anya Hurwitz, Executive Director of Sobrato Early Academic Language, built on Hirsch-Pasek鈥檚 point, noting that 鈥渨hen children are engaged, when they鈥檙e interested, when they鈥檙e curious, the learning is deeper.鈥
Making learning relevant for young children, recognizing the assets and culture they bring to the classroom, and making learning joyful are all part of delivering developmentally appropriate practice.
There are many opportunities to incorporate developmentally appropriate practice, including playful learning, into the kindergarten classroom. Some strategies include:
To support kindergarten and early grade educators in delivering these developmentally appropriate practice ideas, state and local education agencies can promote curricula and instructional tools that are aligned with DAP, provide professional learning opportunities to build teacher and principal understanding of child development, and resources to ensure that classrooms are equipped to allow for exploration, discovery, and play.
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