Emmett to Pilot Kindergarten Readiness Program
In an effort to help next year’s
Emmett kindergarten students be better prepared for school BEFORE they enter
school, the Emmett School District is piloting a Kindergarten Readiness Program
this spring. Developed by a committee led by elementary principal Greg Alexander (Kenneth J Carberry
Elementary), the pilot involves screening next year’s kindergartners when they
register for school this spring. The screener will assess the child’s age
appropriate early learning skill level.
Every child who participates in the
screening will receive a backpack that will include a toolkit of materials, activities,
and lessons that parents can use with their children 15-20 minutes a day over
the spring/summer that will reinforce skills such as identifying shapes,
colors, numbers, and counting to 10. They’ll receive an early learning reading
and language arts program adapted from the Lee Pesky Learning Center that was
developed in part by Cindy Roberts,
the Emmett Director of Curriculum. These materials will help with letter
recognition and related reading skills. The backpacks will include crayons and
scissors with activities to help children develop their tactile skills. Besides the backpack, every child who
participates in the early screening, will have their name entered in a drawing
that will be conducted next fall. The grand prize in the drawing will be a
bicycle for a kindergarten student at both Carberry and Shadow Butte.
In addition to Principal
Alexander, the committee that developed the backpack program included Todd Adams (Principal, Shadow Butte
Elementary), members of the district’s preschool and kindergarten staff, as
well as community members from WICAP Headstart, several private preschool and
day care providers, and Senator Steven
Thayn (District 8). Senator Thayn who has opposed state funding for
preschool and kindergarten, acknowledges that “parents don’t always know what
to do in order to help their children be prepared for school.” Senator Thayn was instrumental in bringing the committee's school and community stakeholder groups together to discuss how to create a local strategy.
The state currently provides funding for ½ time kindergarten. There are no state funds allocated for preschool. The toolkits and activities provided to parents will provide them resources to work with their children at home. This, according to Thayn, falls well within his philosophy that the primary educators of children are their parents who should be supported in their efforts by their community schools.
The state currently provides funding for ½ time kindergarten. There are no state funds allocated for preschool. The toolkits and activities provided to parents will provide them resources to work with their children at home. This, according to Thayn, falls well within his philosophy that the primary educators of children are their parents who should be supported in their efforts by their community schools.
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Greg Alexander, Principal
Kenneth J Carberry Elementary
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Senator Steven Thayn
Legislative District 8
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The rationale behind the kindergarten
readiness program comes from the experiences the district staff has had working
with kindergarten children that come from poverty and the data the district receives
each fall after the first administration of the Idaho Reading Indicator (IRI)
assessment.
For example, this past fall, less
than 41% of the kindergartners at Carberry performed at grade level on the IRI (composite
scores) and less than 35% at Shadow Butte. Additionally, only 19.1% of the
Carberry kindergartners scored at grade level on the Letter Recognition subtest
and fewer than 11% at Shadow Butte.
Elementary School
|
Enrollment
|
% of students eligible for Free or Reduced Lunch
|
% of Kindergartners at grade level
Composite Score
Fall (2019) IRI
|
% of Kindergartners at grade level
Letter Knowledge
Fall (2019) IRI
|
Kenneth J Carberry
|
531
|
56%
|
40.4%
|
19.1%
|
Shadow
Butte
|
516
|
53%
|
<35%
|
<11%
|
In response to the data and their experiences working with the children in school, the Emmett teaching staff and administrators found themselves attempting to conduct intensive intervention and remediation strategies to help close the gap for students. Some of those strategies, including full day kindergarten for identified low performing students, stretched the district’s thin resources. This prompted a discussion surrounding how to help parents help their students come to school ready to learn.
The Kindergarten Readiness Program’s distribution
of backpacks and educational toolkits is an attempt to provide resources and
encouragement to the families of next year’s kindergarten students to
engage their children in age appropriate early learning activities that can
increase the likelihood that the children experience early success as they
start their k-12 journey in school. It’s a strategy with few downsides and
potentially significant rewards.