March 2009

The New Kindergarten: Say Goodbye to Playtime?

It’s hard to imagine a room filled with five and six-year-olds cramming for exams instead of, say, playing charades or building a castle with Legos. EarlyStories came across this provocative report while scrolling through the excellent Gotham Schools blog. The report presented a pretty grim portrait of kindergarten. Some kindergartens are spending two to three [...]

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Head Start and Teacher Training: An Issue Worth Examining

A recent television report scratched the surface of the many issues journalists ought to start exploring when looking at the planned expansion of the federally funded Early Head Start and Head Start. The story reported on the lack of qualifications of Head Start teachers in Orange County, Florida and noted that many teachers involved in [...]

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First Private, Now Public Pre-K Harder To Get Into Than Harvard

Getting into one of New York City’s reputable private nursery schools has in recent years become something of a competitive sport for the wealthy and connected. The competition has intensified with more parents choosing to raise their progeny in the city and competing for the small number of high quality preschool programs. A few years [...]

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Classroom Visits Can Illuminate Pre-school Issue

EarlyStories has for months urged journalists to visit pre-school classrooms and glimpse what is happening (or not happening), especially as states battle over funding cuts and the prospect of economic stimulus money. So it was gratifying to see a reporter from the Beaumont Enterprise observing the routines of 4 and 5-year-olds at a private pre-k [...]

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New Tool For Rating Florida Pre-K Programs

Florida may be a leader for enrolling 4-year-olds in public pre-kindergarten, but questions about the quality of the programs have long been an issue. The Sunshine State is one of eight states meeting fewer than half of 10 standards considered vital by the National Institute for Early Education Research in New Jersey. State leaders are [...]

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Alaska’s Palin Pushed on Pre-School Expansion

The Anchorage Daily News published an interesting editorial this week criticizing the state’s lagging response to providing publicly funded pre-kindergarten. Alaska is one of only 12 states in the U.S. that does not provide programs for its youngest residents. The editorial follow a statewide summit on pre-kindergarten in November where educators and advocates pushed for [...]

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Quality questions as hearings begin: what to look for in a visit

As the House Committee on Education and Labor begin hearings this week on early childhood education, it’s a good time for journalists to think about visiting centers of early learning, including Head Start and Early Head Start. Questions about the quality of programs abound at a time when President Barack Obama’s stimulus package includes some [...]

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Great Job! Wait, not so fast…easy on that praise!

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Stirring up the Fans

Diane Flynn Keith, a homeschool advocate who runs an anti-public school listserv and an online site for homeschoolers, reported in a message to her listserv that the ABC producer for the Stossel show had contacted her and asked her to put together parents who would oppose universal preschool. She said the producer contacted her again [...]

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More on Stossel: “Universal Pre-K: ‘This Whole Thing Is a Scam’” and the Response from Pre-K Now

EarlyStories blogged yesterday about ABC News’ partnership with a libertarian foundation to produce a so-called “news” report that, guess what, espouses libertarian anti-government ideas. The item was based on a Reason.tv video on the same topic. The program segment (to air tonight) mainly features Mia Levi, the operator of a string of private preschools who [...]

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