This month, in elementary school auditoriums around the country, parents are lapping up adorable performances by their gradeschoolers. Early childhood specialists might be prone to criticize the use of these on-stage showcases, especially when they require kids to spend hours memorizing songs instead of being involved in deeper learning. But you cannot argue with their power to spotlight the diversity and potential of the next generation. Here's one that goes above and beyond:
The video shows first graders from Red Bank Primary School in the borough of Red Bank, NJ, a district that has caught the attention of early childhood educators and education reformers around the country. Despite challenging demographics -- a population of children from low-income families who speak a language other than English at home -- the students in the Red Bank Borough have achieved remarkable academic success over the past five years. The vast majority of students are meeting or surpassing state averages on math standardized tests and coming close on reading tests. Most recent scores show that 95 percent of first and second graders in the school district are considered proficient on local assessments that predict how well those students will do on statewide tests a few years later.
The district uses the Tools of the Mind curriculum in both its pre-kindergarten and kindergarten classrooms. It also employs a consistent language arts and literacy program in grades K-3, emphasizing balanced literacy, learning centers and guided reading. Leaders have suggested that the Tools approach, which focuses on purposeful play and rich language development, as well as the district's emphasis on a seamless delivery of literacy instruction from grade to grade, are among the reasons for the children's high performance.
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The Early Education Initiative seeks to promote a high-quality and continuous system of early care and education for all children, birth to age 8. While much of our focus is on pre-K up through 3rd grade, we also examine the need for high-quality infant and toddler care and better policies to support new parents.
Our forum on LinkedIn is a space for school district leaders, early childhood educators, policymakers and other interested parties to discuss their struggles, questions and achievements in creating a “before birth and up through third grade” system. It grew out of an event held at the New America Foundation on March 2, 2011.
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