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Archive for Preschool & Early Teaching

Here you can read the news selection on Preschool & Early Teaching.

Make your Toddler a Math Genius

Three-year-old Nicole Smith knows how to put numbers in order and she knows how to stack blocks from largest to smallest.

“The biggest goes last and the smallest goes on the top,” she says.

What Nicole doesn’t realize is that she is learning basic algebraic concepts. And, according to research from John’s Hopkins, these skills will help her in math for the rest of her years in school.

“But we’re not talking about teaching algebra. We’re talking about teaching the kind of thinking that helps children think in algebra - and think in other higher mathematics,” explains child math expert Dr. Lynn Hart.

Experts say whether innately good at math or not, you can improve the math skills of a 3 or 4-year-old by playing games at home, like counting, sorting, and looking for patterns.

“Asking them to sort the silverware - ‘can we get all the forks and knifes and spoons together?’ - what a wonderful sorting activity. And it’s things that parents can do with their kids that are just normal household activities, but then talking about it,” says Dr. Hart.

Dr. Hart also feels one of the easiest exercises you can do at home with children is sound patterns. An example of this might be to do a “clap clap snap, clap clap snap” game. Ask the child to repeat the pattern that you make and then later ask the child to add on to that pattern.

Experts say this early algebraic thinking will help students later in life … in school and at work.

Fourteen-year-old Jen agrees, “‘Cause everything that you do leads to math… and so like, I like to use math in a lot of different ways.”

Tips for Parents
Excellence in mathematics education requires high expectations and strong support for all students. Regardless of their personal characteristics, background, or physical challenges, all students must have opportunities to study - and support to learn - mathematics. This does not mean that every student should be treated the same. But all students need access to a coherent, challenging mathematics curriculum that is taught by competent and well-supported mathematics teachers.

Too many students - especially students who are poor, not native speakers of English, disabled, female, or members of minority groups - are victims of low expectations in mathematics. For example, “tacking” (grouping students by ability) has consistently consigned disadvantaged groups of students to mathematics classes that concentrate on redemption or do not offer significant mathematical substances. The Equity Principle demands that high expectations for mathematics learning be communicated in word and deeds to all students.

Children learn by exploring their world. Everyday activities are natural vehicles for developing mathematical thinking. When a parent places crackers in a toddler’s hands and says, “Here are two crackers - one, two,” or when a three-year-old chooses how she wants her sandwich cut - into pieces shaped like triangles, rectangles, or small squares - mathematical thinking is occurring. As a child arranges stuffed animals by size, an adult might ask, “Which animal is the smallest?” Through careful observation, conversations, and guidance, adults can help children make connections between the mathematics in familiar situations. Because young children develop a disposition for mathematics from their early experiences, opportunities for learning should be positive and supportive.

Source: Winknews.com, Florida
http://www.winknews.com/features/education/29946519.html

1 October, 2008. 7:06 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Learning Can’t Begin Too Soon

Any sprint coach will stress the importance of a good start. That’s why sprinters focus just as much on the starting blocks as the finish line – for what happens at the outset often determines the outcome.

Such is life.

This is the first lesson, quite literally, that advocates of early childhood development will teach you. The human brain is essentially front-end loaded, according to scientists. The pattern of your life is stamped to a large degree by the stimuli and experiences of early childhood which imprint themselves on the developing brain.

By the time they begin kindergarten, many kids from good home environments already have a head start in terms of cognitive, emotional and social skills, and it’s an advantage they carry with them all through life. The correlation between a good start to life and a good job later on – not to mention good health and good behaviour – is surprisingly strong.

Other kids who come from disadvantaged backgrounds are already losing the race before they darken the doors of a school. By no means are they doomed, but they do face an uphill battle. Research shows that if kids have not caught up in literacy and language skills by Grade 3, chances are they never will. Or if they are experiencing a behavioural or learning impediment, this spells trouble down the road.

One-quarter of Canadian kids up to six years old are in that situation. That’s not just a scary statistic, but a call to action. Not only is this a tragedy for the children who never reach their potential, but also for our society. Underachievement carries a lot of baggage in terms of costly social and health problems.

But that’s not all. It’s also an important economic issue. Increasingly, our prosperity will depend on producing knowledge workers – a fact that is more readily grasped in China than here. Other countries are investing in early childhood development programs – Scandinavians lead the pack – but Canada ranks last among industrialized countries in spending in this area.

Our current crop of political leaders doesn’t get it yet. Prime Minister Stephen Harper foolishly cut the Liberals’ modest funding of such initiatives. And the provincial Tories recently canned a pre-Primary pilot program deemed too expensive to expand provincewide.

But there are signs the business community is paying attention. Last week, former banking executive Charles Coffey made a direct pitch to a primarily business audience at the Halifax Club.

“Of course your universities and colleges need more dollars,” he said. “But I’m just as convinced that at the other end of the educational spectrum, major investments in your early child development programs are sorely needed too. When corporate Canada divides its philanthropy pie for education, why can’t a larger piece be devoted to early childhood development? It’s time to invest in bridging the gap.”

At the moment, early childhood education in Canada consists of a loose patchwork of programs and assistance. Advocates would like to see billions invested in creating a nationwide network of community hubs, preferably centred around schools, that would provide support for parents, child care, social services and activities.

For those who toil in the trenches, this is an investment in human capital we can no longer afford to put off.

“I’ve spent 10 years on the South Shore of Nova Scotia as a supervisor of special education and student services,” Theresa Griffin, Maritime co-ordinator of the Council for Early Child Development, told The Chronicle Herald editorial board last week. “We could tell those kids coming into the system who were going to need support. But you know what? Those kids had to fail. They had to fail badly and repeatedly before we could put any kind of intervention in place for them. And then … the intervention was not tailored to their needs, nor intensive enough, of sufficient dosage, to make a difference.”

That’s a waste of government resources. But it’s also a waste of human resources which our society needs. Without greater emphasis on early childhood development, we might as well be entering the global race without tying our shoelaces first.

Source: TheChronicleHerald.ca
http://thechronicleherald.ca/Editorial/1081664.html

28 September, 2008. 11:28 AM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

A Teacher’s Plea: What Badly Behaved Boys Need Is Discipline, not Drugs

The class was working peacefully. It was the first lesson of the morning and everyone was a little bleary-eyed.

Joe Smith, I notice was doodling on a text book. ‘Come on Joe. That’s enough of that. Get on with your work please.’

I was new to teaching and trying to be firm but fair. The next minute, Joe grabbed his neighbour’s pencil case and threw it across the floor. When I remonstrated him he told me to ‘f*** off’.

At the end of the lesson I asked him to stay behind. Demanding an apology, I told him I’d be phoning home as well as reporting his behaviour to the head.

Joe simply shrugged. ‘It’s not my fault. I’m ill. I’ve got ADHD. I can’t help it.’

This was the first time I’d heard of Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, and I actually laughed. Appalling behaviour an illness? I’d never heard anything so ludicrous.

Sadly, however, it certainly wasn’t the last I’d hear of it. This mysterious ailment made a sudden and dramatic appearance among British and American schoolchildren in the early 1990s. Before that, it was practically unheard of.

On the Continent, you’d still struggle to get a doctor to agree that a child who ran riot in the classroom, shouted and swore at staff, was anything other than extremely badly behaved.

But in the UK, youngsters like David, a 14-year-old I teach, who last week kicked a chair across the classroom because he was enraged that I’d asked him to stop texting during an exam, are now routinely labelled as having a psychiatric disorder.

David and thousands of badly behaved children like him are deemed to have ADHD and are medicated accordingly.

During the decade I’ve been teaching, the number of children prescribed the amphetamine Ritalin, used to ‘treat’ ADHD, has simply exploded. It is estimated that 400,000 children are currently prescribed the drug.

In 1991, the number of prescriptions issued was a mere 2,000. When I first started teaching I’d never heard of Ritalin or ADHD.

Now, I can honestly say I don’t think there’s a single class I teach without at least one and often two or three children being medicated with this very powerful class B drug.

Ritalin has unpleasant side effects - including sleeplessness and nausea - and the penalty for selling it illegally is a maximum of 14 years’ imprisonment.

Recent research has linked it to depression, stunted growth, heart problems, insomnia and weight gain and, according to the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency, 11 British children on Ritalin have died.

Yet this drug is now routinely prescribed to children as young as six or seven.

Now, finally, serious concerns are being voiced about the way it is being doled out like sweets to thousands of young children.

The National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE), which advises what drugs should be made available on the NHS, has just issued guidelines recommending that Ritalin be used only as a last resort.

Parenting classes, they urge, might be more effective in controlling the bad behaviour which has become endemic in our schools and on our streets.

Boys are three times more likely to be diagnosed with ADHD than girls. And looking at the ’symptoms’ that characterise it, it’s not hard to see why.

Is the child easily distracted and quickly bored? Do they forget things such as instructions, homework and spellings? Do they fidget, doodle and lose things?

If the answer to these questions is yes, then according to the ‘experts’, the child might well have ADHD. Alternatively, they may simply be a typical boy.

Added to the list of symptoms are, in my experience, extreme rudeness and a dislike of being asked to wear school uniform.

If asked several times to stop talking over me, children with the ‘illness’ generally swear at me.

When I phone their home, their parents react with the uniform comment: ‘He can’t help it. He’s got ADHD.’

Unsurprisingly, an increasing number of doctors and psychiatrists are expressing the fear that children are being labelled with a mental illness and given drugs for behaviour that in the past would simply have been labelled ‘very naughty.’

And anecdotally, there is plenty of evidence to suggest that schools are pressurising parents to put children who cause mayhem on Ritalin.

As a teacher, I’m secretly relieved when I hear that a particularly difficult child, one who won’t do any work, who chats and texts through the lesson, who sneers and swears at staff without a second thought, has been prescribed Ritalin.

The drug isn’t known as the ‘chemical cosh’ for nothing. If I’m honest, though, I don’t believe that these children are ill. I think they come from insecure, unstable backgrounds where the concept of a bedtime is as fanciful as the fairy tales they’ve never been read.

I believe that many of the children labelled with ADHD and drugged into acquiescence are simply youngsters who have been raised without any boundaries.

They live in homes where junk food is the norm, where there is no parental control over what they watch on TV and when they watch it, and where authority, whether it be teachers, the police or the lollipop lady, is routinely sneered at and derided.

A study some years ago in America suggested that much of the behaviour labelled ADHD was in fact simply exhaustion, and that children were magically cured of their affliction when they went to bed and slept at night instead of watching gory horror movies.

Personally, I think that many children would benefit from firmer and more consistent parenting.

Of course, having an active, boisterous seven-year-old child is hard work. But it seems to me that far too many mums and dads are happy to have their children labelled with a psychiatric condition and drugged - even if the existence of the disorder is hotly disputed by the experts.

Youngsters might be turned into wide-eyed, slow-witted zombies, but at least they’re not running amok in the playground and inconveniencing their parents by getting suspended.

Ritalin, like Valium, has become mother’s little helper. It relieves parents of the responsibility of actually having to discipline their children. But as a society, we may pay a very high price indeed for drugging a generation of our children.

* Frances Childs is a teacher in a comprehensive school in the South of England.

Source: Daily Mail
http://tinyurl.com/4aqr7v

25 September, 2008. 12:48 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Unraveling ‘Math Dyslexia’

Although school has been back for less than a month, it is likely that many children are already experiencing frustration and confusion in math class. Research at The University of Western Ontario in London, Canada could change the way we view math difficulties and how we assist children who face those problems.

Daniel Ansari is an assistant professor and Canada Research Chair in Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience in the Department of Psychology at Western. He is using brain imaging to understand how children develop math skills, and what kind of brain development is associated with those skills.

Research shows that many children who experience mathematical difficulties have developmental dyscalculia – a syndrome that is similar to dyslexia, a learning disability that affects a child’s ability to read. Children with dyscalculia often have difficulty understanding numerical quantity. For example, they find it difficult to connect abstract symbols, such as a number, to the numerical magnitude it represents.

They can’t see the connection, for instance, between five fingers and the number ‘5′. This is similar to children with dyslexia who have difficulty connecting sounds with letters. In a recent study Ansari and graduate student Ian Holloway showed that children who are better at connecting numerical symbols and magnitudes are also those who have higher math scores.

Ansari says parents and teachers are often not aware that developmental dyscalculia is just as common as developmental dyslexia and is frequently related to dyslexia. There is a great need to increase public awareness of developmental dyscalculia.

“Research shows that many children have both dyslexia and dyscalculia. We are now exploring further the question of exactly what brain differences exist between those who have just math problems and those who have both math and reading difficulties,” says Ansari.

Using functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) to study the brains of children with math difficulties, Ansari says that it becomes clear that children with developmental dyscalculia show atypical activation patterns in a part of the brain called the parietal cortex.

This research holds tremendous promise for people who, in the past, had simply accepted that they are ‘not good at math.’ Understanding the causes and brain correlates of dyscalculia may help to design remediation tools to improve the lives of children and adults with the syndrome.

A report of this research is forthcoming in the Journal of Experimental Child Psychology.

“We have some cultural biases in North America around math skills,” says Ansari. “We think that people who are good at math must be exceptionally intelligent, and even more dismaying and damaging, we have an attitude that being bad at math is socially acceptable. People who would never dream of telling others they are unable to read, will proclaim publicly they flunked math.”

Ansari says that math skills are hugely important to life success and children who suffer math difficulties may avoid careers that, with help, might be a great fit for them.

An article by Ansari entitled “The Brain Goes to School: Strengthening the Education-Neuroscience Connection,” will be published in the upcoming Education Canada, the magazine of the Canadian Education Association. In the article Ansari says technological advances such as fMRI have provided unprecedented insights into the working of the human brain.

“A teacher who understands brain structure and function will be better equipped to interpret children’s behaviours, their strengths and weaknesses, from a scientific point of view, and this will in turn influence how they teach,” says Ansari.

Source: Science Daily
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080924151007.htm

25 September, 2008. 12:45 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Parents ‘Need Lessons about ADHD’

Parents need lessons in how to cope with their children’s unruly behaviour, new guidelines on attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) say.

The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) says drugs such as Ritalin should be avoided - and must not be given to the under-fives.

Teachers would also benefit from training to recognise and help children with this condition, it adds.

Any primary school class is likely to have a child with ADHD, experts say.

Most of the estimated 365,000 children in Britain with ADHD receive no treatment at all.

But of those who do, most - about 37,000 - are prescribed stimulants like Ritalin (methylphenidate).

Children with ADHD have extreme difficulty sitting still, learning or concentrating.

At school they may find it hard to keep friends and suffer from bullying because of their behaviour. Looking after affected children can be exhausting for parents.

Parenting classes

The guidelines, which cover England, Wales and Northern Ireland, say parent training and education programmes should be offered as a first-line treatment for ADHD, both for pre-school and school age children.

The programmes teach parents how to create a structured home environment, encourage attentiveness and concentration, and manage misbehaviour better.

Drugs remain a first option for children over five and young people with severe ADHD, say the guidelines, but only as part of a comprehensive treatment plan that includes psychological and behavioural interventions.

Dr Tim Kendall, a consultant psychiatrist from Sheffield who is joint director of the National Collaborating Centre for Mental Health and helped draw up the guidelines, said: “There is an over-reliance on medicines.

“Quite commonly, people tend to revert to offering methylphenidate or atomoxetene. When they do that it’s not always because there’s a good balance of risk and benefits. It’s because the child has got what appears to be ADHD and that’s what’s available.

Its easier to prescribe a drug when other options like parent training programmes are not available.

Dr Kendall said it was important to diagnose ADHD correctly, rather than label all bad behaviour as ADHD. The symptoms of ADHD persist in all settings - both at school and at home - and cause real impairment.

Andrea Bilbow, chief executive of the ADHD charity ADDISS, welcomed the NICE recommendations but questioned how helpful the parent training programmes would be to parents.

“Parenting programmes are extremely important, but they need to be specific for ADHD.

“The ones that NICE are recommending were designed for the parents of children with conduct disorder, which is completely different from ADHD,” she said.

The Scottish InterCollegiate Guidelines Network (SIGN) is rewriting its guidelines on ADHD diagnosis and treatment and will take the NICE guidelines into consideration.

Their new guidance will come out in the first half of 2009.

Source: BBC News
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/7630926.stm

24 September, 2008. 12:37 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Academic Success Begins at Home: How Children Can Succeed in School

American taxpayers invest heavily in education. Last year, spending on public K–12 education totaled $553 billion, about 4 percent of gross domestic prod­uct (GDP) in 2006. For each child enrolled in a pub­lic elementary or secondary school, expenditures averaged $9,266 that year—an increase of 128 per­cent, adjusted for inflation, since 1970.

Despite this increase in public spending, student achievement and educational attainment over the last four decades has remained relatively flat. In 2007, a significant portion of students, disproportionately from disadvantaged backgrounds, scored “below basic” in reading and math on the National Assess­ment of Educational Progress (NAEP). Sadly, in many of the nation’s largest cities, fewer than half of high school students graduate.

While academic research has consistently shown that increased spending does not correlate with edu­cational gains, the research does show a strong rela­tionship between parental influences and children’s educational outcomes, from school readiness to college completion. Two compelling parental factors emerge:

1. family structure, i.e., the number of parents living in the student’s home and their relationships to the child, and

2. parents’ involvement in their children’s schoolwork.

Consequently, the solution to improving educa­tional outcomes begins at home, by strengthening marriage and promoting stable family formation and parental involvement.

The Erosion of Family Stability in America

“Perhaps the most profound change in the American family over the past four decades,” writes sociologist Paul Amato, “has been the decline in the share of children growing up in households with biological parents.” In 1960, 88 percent of all children lived with two parents, compared to 68 percent in 2007. In 1960, 5 percent of all children were born to unmarried mothers. That figure rose to 38.5 per­cent in 2006. Demographers have estimated that, overall, one child in two will spend some portion of his or her childhood in a single-parent family.

Studies show that children raised in intact families, i.e., with two con­tinuously married parents, tend to fare better on a number of cognitive, emotional, and behavioral outcomes than children living in other family forms. Not surprisingly, the changes in family structure over the last 40 years have affected child and adoles­cent well-being. In 2002, nearly 7 million children between the ages of 12 and 18 repeated a grade. Based on this figure, Professor Amato estimates that if the share of two-parent fami­lies had remained unchanged be­tween 1980 and 2002, some 300,000 fewer teens would have repeated a grade. Some 750,000 fewer students in 2002 would have repeated a grade if the share of two-parent families remained at the level it was in 1960.

Social science research over the past decades suggests that family structure affects children’s school outcomes, from preschool to college. Some of the variations in school performance could be explained, in part or in whole, by the differences in family resources such as time and money, family dynamics and parental characteristics that are asso­ciated with the various family forms. These are mediating factors, or mechanisms through which family structure affects schooling outcomes. Family structure may also exert a direct influence, inde­pendent of mediating factors. Thus, depending on the outcome, family structure’s total effect may con­sist of one or more mediating influences or a com­bination of both direct and mediating influences.

Though various methodological research issues— e.g., data quality, inconsistent definitions of family structure, the selection effect (e.g., are individuals who possess better parenting qualities more likely to choose marriage and stay married, or does mar­riage per se bolster children’s well-being?)—limit the findings, the evidence, nonetheless, is strong: Fam­ily structure matters.

School Readiness. A number of early-childhood outcomes contribute to children’s eventual school readiness. The evidence suggests that potentially important early-childhood outcomes vary by family structure. One study, analyzing 1,370 mothers in the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study who were continuously married or in cohabiting rela­tionships from the child’s birth to age three, found that three-year-olds born to cohabiting mothers tended to exhibit more aggressive, withdrawn, and anxious or depressive behavior than children born to married mothers. For aggressive and with­drawn behaviors, the association was explained by income differences. For anxiety and depressive symptoms, even controlling for income, the cohab­itation effect remained.

Studies show that reading to young children aids their literacy development. Toddlers and preschool-age children in married-parent families are read to more often than peers in non-intact families. One study of 11,500 kindergartners living with two par­ents orparent figuresreported that, accounting for parental education and income, children living with married parents averaged higher reading achieve­ment test scores than peers living in cohabiting or stepparent families.

Elementary and Secondary Education. The research on family structure and elementary and secondary educational outcome is extensive. Studies have reported that:

1. First-graders whose mothers were married when they were born are less likely to engage in dis­ruptive behavior with peers and teachers than those whose mothers were single or cohabiting at the time of their birth.

2. Children aged three to 12 who live in intact fam­ilies have higher average math scores than peers whose mothers live in cohabiting relationships.

3. The association between family structure and nine-year-olds’ science and math achievement appears to be cross-national.

4. Children aged seven to 10 who live in continu­ously intact families tend to score higher on read­ing tests than peers who have lived in other family structures.

5. Children aged six to 11 who live in intact fami­lies tend to be more engaged in their schoolwork than peers in other family structures.

6. Eighth-graders in two-parent families perform, on average, better on math and science tests than peers in single-parent or stepparent families.

7. The predominant family structure of a school’s student population appears to be linked to the individual science and math scores of eighth-graders.

8. Ninth-graders whose mothers were married when they were born are more likely to complete an algebra course than are peers whose mothers were single when they were born.

9. Middle school and high school students who expe­rience a parental divorce tend to suffer declines in their grade point averages and are more likely to fail a course one year later compared to peers of married parents; the evidence suggests a causal link.

10. Among middle school and high school students, the portion of childhood spent in a single-parent family is associated with declines in GPAs over time; and living in a single-mother family with a cohabiting partner is associated with a greater likelihood of suspension or expulsion from school at a later time.

Finally, studies have also shown a robust link between family structure and high school dropout or graduation rates, and the evidence suggests that the relationship may be causal.

Higher Education and Educational Attainment. The impact of family structure on educational out­comes appears to last into young adulthood. Throughout the college entrance process, students from non-intact families tend to fall behind their peers from intact families. The gap increases when the process involves selective college admission. Overall, children from intact families complete more years of schooling and achieve higher educational attainment than do peers from other family forms.

One study, analyzing two nationally representa­tive data sources, reported that longer durations in single-parent or blended families during child­hood appear to have a negative impact on college attendance and graduation. Though family income and parental education explained the association between single-parent families and lower college attendance and graduation rates, the disparities in these outcomes between children in intact families and those in blended families persisted.

Similarly, another study showed that, accounting for family income and estimated financial aid, an average student from a non-intact family was 5 per­cent less likely to attend a four-year college and 6 percent less likely to graduate from college than an average student from an intact family.

Parental Involvement

Parental involvement emerges as another robust influence on educational outcomes. It is multi-dimensional. Examples include monitoring chil­dren’s activities outside home and school; setting rules; having conversations about and helping chil­dren with school work and school-related issues; holding high educational expectations; discussing future planning with children and helping them with important decision making; participating in school-related activities such as meeting with teach­ers and volunteering in the classroom; and reading to children or engaging in other enrichment or lei­sure activities together.

A meta-analysis of 77 studies, consisting of 300,000 elementary and secondary students, found that parental educational expectations are a particu­larly important aspect of parental involvement. Parenting style, reading to children, and, to a lesser extent, participation in school-related activities appeared to be influential as well. Furthermore, parental involvement is associated with multiple measures of student achievement, for the entire stu­dent population as well as for minority and low-income student populations. Overall, “the academic advantage for those parents who were highly involved in their education averaged about 0.5–0.6 of a standard deviation for overall educational out­comes, grades and academic achievement.”

Parental Involvement and Family Structure. The level of parental involvement varies by family structure, and the relationship between parental involvement and educational outcomes depends on the family context as well. One study, for exam­ple, found that compared to high school students from intact families, those from single- or step­parent families reported less parental involvement in their school work, supervision, and parental educational expectations, which, in turn, affected school outcomes.

Early Childhood. Studies show that a sensitive, warm, and respon­sive type of parenting and engaging in play activities with young children bolster their social and emotional development, communication skills, and ability to focus. Doing arts and crafts with children, reading to them, showing them how to write words, and using a more complicated vocab­ulary around them also aid their liter­acy and language development. One study reported a link between these types of parental engagement and a range of school readiness out­comes such as “children’s motivation to learn, attention, task persistence, and receptive vocabulary and…fewer conduct problems.”

Frequent contact between parents and their children’s preschools as well as parent participation in school-related activities, such as volunteering in the classroom or meeting with a teacher, appear to benefit children on a num­ber of dimensions, including classroom performance and social interaction with peers and adults. One study reported that children whose teachers per­ceived more parental involvement tended to exhibit fewer problems and higher language and math com­petencies compared to children whose teachers per­ceived less parental engagement. The evidence also suggests that parental school involvement’s pos­itive influences buffer against some of the negative effects of poverty.

Elementary Education. Parental involvement during elementary school affects children’s school­ing outcomes as well. The quality of the parent-child relationship is significant. Middle school stu­dents who received sensitive, supportive parenting from their mothers during kindergarten tend to per­form better in school. Children of parents who frequently praise and show affection to them are less likely to require classroom attention for behavior and socio-emotional issues.

Studies also show that parental involvement in school-related activities during elementary school is associated with long-term educational gains. One study reported that among low-income African-American families, children of highly involved par­ents during elementary school were more likely to graduate from high school. In the same study, children of parents who were involved in school-related activities for three or more years completed more years of schooling compared to peers of less involved parents. Involvement, specifically by fathers, is significant as well. Children of fathers who visit their classrooms and meet with teachers tend to fare better in school than peers whose moth­ers are the only involved parent.

Reading with children and the way in which par­ents read to their children affect children’s reading ability. The research shows a distinction between reading storybooks to children, which contributes to their literacy development, and teaching children to read and write, which aids their language devel­opment. Both types of activities affect third- and fourth-grade performance.[50] Furthermore, parents’ use of vocabulary and their attitude toward home­work appear to influence corresponding outcomes in their children. Not surprisingly, children of parents who provide appropriate help with their homework tend to fare better in school.

The home environment in which children are raised plays a role in schooling outcomes. For ex­ample, in a study of middle-class families, elemen­tary students whose parents offered them math and science learning materials showed greater incli­nation toward and interest in math and science activities. Finally, parental expectations of achieve­ment, particularly adolescents’ perceptions of such expectations, appear to strengthen their actual mo­tivation and ability in school.

Secondary Education. Parent-child relation­ship quality continues to be an effective factor in schooling outcomes throughout adolescence. For example, in one study, youths who felt bonded to their parents and enjoyed good communication with them tended to have higher grades and physical well-being. In another study, among low-income youths, those whose parents encouraged individual decision making in their children during early ado­lescence were more likely to graduate from high school and attend college. Beyond academics, teens who receive more support from their parents are more likely to participate in structured after-school activities, which, in turn, are positively corre­lated with achievement and social competence.

During adolescence, parental monitoring to the extent to which parents know their children’s activ­ities outside of home and school, plays a crucial role in adolescent outcomes, particularly when children and adolescents perceive genuine care from their parents. Parental monitoring is associated with fewer school problems, less substance use, and reduced delinquency. Moreover, parental monitor­ing is positively linked to social development, school grades, and school engagement, such as pay­ing attention in class and being motivated to do well in school. The evidence also suggests that paren­tal monitoring may have different effects on boys and girls.

Not only does parental involvement in their chil­dren’s school-related activities send a positive mes­sage to students and teachers, such involvement is also related to high school completion. The research also suggests that minority students benefit from their parents’ participation in formal leader­ship roles at the school district level. The effects of parental involvement, however, may vary by par­ents’ education. One study showed that involve­ment from more-educated parents was associated with fewer behavioral problems in students, which, in turn, affected achievement and aspirations. Among students whose parents are less educated, parental involvement was related to student aspira­tions but not achievement.

At the secondary education level, high parental expectations continue to yield significant schooling benefits. In one study of high school seniors, “parental expectations for achievement stand out as the most significant influences on [their] achieve­ment growth, high school credits completed, and enrollment in extracurricular academic high school programs.” High parental educational expecta­tions are also associated with math and reading scores, interest in school, academic self-discipline, future planning, and motivation for school work. In one study of African-American families, when parents taught that success originates from effort rather than surpassing peers, their expectations had a strong effect on eighth- and ninth-grade math grades. Overall, parental expectations appear more influential than peer effects.

Finally, discussions with parents about the future and pursuing further education support teens’ aspi­rations and college preparation. One study of high-achievement Latino college students found that their parents imparted strong encouragement and values that emphasized education as a means to escape poverty.

Policy Implications

Social science research over the last few decades indicates a strong relationship between family struc­ture, parental involvement and children’s educa­tional outcomes, with enduring influences from early childhood to young adulthood. The empirical evidence points to several policy implications:

* Family policy intersects critically with education policy. Fortifying the intact family structure may lead to improvements in individual student out­comes as well as the American education system as a whole.

* Policies that strengthen healthy marriage and stable family formation may bolster child well-being, including school outcomes, both at the individual and aggregate levels.

* Conversely, policies and laws that facilitate fur­ther family breakdown may have adverse impacts on children’s educational outcomes and provide additional stress on the education system.

* In education reform efforts, greater emphasis on parental involvement and parental choice could yield significant gains in student achievement and attainment. Importantly, the research shows consistent benefits of high parental involvement for minority and low-income students, which deserves serious consideration in light of the achievement gap.

* On the other hand, education initiatives that dis­regard the importance of families and parental involvement, instead focusing on strategies such as increased expenditures, are likely to continue to prove less effective or ineffective altogether.

Conclusion

American taxpayers invest heavily in education, with annual public education spending totaling $553 billion. The average annual expenditure per child enrolled in a public school amounts to $9,266. Though per-pupil expenditures have increased dra­matically over the past few decades, student achieve­ment has remained relatively flat. A significant portion of students attending public schools score “below basic” in reading and math on the National Assessment of Educational Progress. In some of the most disadvantaged central cities in America, fewer than half of high school students graduate.

While numerous education reforms over the last quarter century have demonstrated little impact on overall student achievement, the research clearly shows that the intact family structure and strong parental involvement are significantly correlated with educational outcomes, from school readiness to college completion. Instead of favoring proven ineffective education policies, policymakers seeking effective education reform should consider policies that strengthen family structure in America and bol­ster parental involvement and choice in education.

Christine C. Kim is Policy Analyst in the Domestic Policy Studies Department at The Heritage Foundation.

Source: Heritage.org
http://www.heritage.org/Research/Education/bg2185.cfm

23 September, 2008. 1:04 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Show your Child How to Figure out Unfamiliar Words

The English language will adopt its millionth word in April, according to the Global Language Monitor (www.languagemonitor.com). Of course, educators cannot possibly teach students the meaning and pronunciation of a million words, so they teach techniques that students can use to figure out unfamiliar words on their own. Parents can reinforce these lessons by reminding their children of the techniques when they read at home.

If you have an elementary-age child who’s struggling to read a word, ask the child to say the sound of each letter. Then ask the child to say the sounds more quickly and connect them to pronounce the word. You also might want to ask your child to look for familiar chunks in the word. Many children know what this means because “chunks” is a word that teachers use to refer to letter combinations. Encourage your child to read each chunk and then to say the chunks more quickly and connect them.
You might be able to ask your child to look for familiar words within an unfamiliar one. For example, if your child cannot figure out the word “unusual,” point out that it contains the word “usual,” but it has been changed into a word that means the opposite because of the prefix “un-.”

Tell your child to look for clues to the meaning of an unfamiliar word by thinking about the other words in the sentence. For instance, if your child asks what “gleeful” means in a sentence such as “Dawn was gleeful when she got good news,” ask your child to think about another word that would make sense in the sentence besides “gleeful.” You also could ask, “How do people feel when they get good news?” If the child says “happy,” point out that a reader can figure out that “gleeful” means “happy” because of the other words in the sentence.

Make sure your child knows how to use a dictionary. Children enjoy kid-friendly ones such as Merriam Webster Children’s Dictionary or the Scholastic Children’s Dictionary. On the Web, the Little Explorers Picture Dictionary is available at www.enchantedlearning.com/dictionary.html. Merriam-Webster’s Word Central offers a dictionary for students ages 11-14 at www.wordcentral.com. (…)

Source: Louisville Courier-Journal
http://tinyurl.com/4hnpln

22 September, 2008. 11:39 AM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Sonic the Hedgehog Helps Scotland Lead the Way in Education through Games

The addition of Sonic the Hedgehog and Super Mario Brothers to the ranks of Robert Burns and Robert Louis Stevenson is helping Scottish schoolchildren become enthused about learning and reaping ground-breaking educational results, according to researchers and teachers.

Experts say in games-based learning, using technology such as the Nintendo Wii and Nintendo DS in the classroom, Scotland leads the world.

According to the Consolarium, the Scottish centre for games and learning which is funded by Learning and Teaching Scotland, the number of pilot schemes around the country has grown exponentially. Last year 10 local authorities were using games-based learning. At the start of the new school term, 27 are investigating its possibilities.

As further evidence of growth, Derek Robertson, head of the Consolarium, points to this week’s Scottish Learning Festival at the SECC in Glasgow. With titles ranging from Thinking Out of the Xbox to Scotland’s Got Game: How Scotland Has Embraced Games-Based Learning, there are 10 seminars sharing examples of how classrooms are using computer games. Last year there were only four related talks.

“I don’t think there is any other place in the world that has done what LTS did,” said Robertson. “I’m continually asked who does my job in England, and there isn’t anyone. For LTS it was a risk, a maverick idea from the left field that has moved into the mainstream. It’s even mentioned in the Curriculum for Excellence. That’s the impact we’ve had.”

The world is now looking to Scotland. Robertson has been asked to speak in Germany, Australia the US. He has already advised the Singapore government. A section of the influential Handheld Learning Conference in London will be given over to what is happening in Scotland.

“People recognise that Scotland is a place that is keen to integrate these things into the curriculum,” said Robertson.

Teachers are reporting that by using games such as Mario and Sonic at the Olympics, Guitar Hero, Wii Sports and Endless Ocean, pupils’ motivation, attendance, personal skills and academic performance have improved, particularly among young boys and hard-to-reach children.

Meldrum Primary school in Aberdeenshire employed the game Endless Ocean as a hook for cross-curricular project for its P7 class. After playing the game on the Wii, which involves controlling a diver exploring a seascape, the pupils learned about bio-diversity, wrote stories and staged a debate about developing the a section of the ocean for tourists.

“It got so heated the person acting out the part of the tourist development person was in tears,” said Kim Aplin, the deputy-head teacher. “The quality of the learning that took place was tremendous. There is no doubt at all it improved their academic ability.”

Other examples around the country include West Lothian nurseries and primary schools using dance mats as a way to develop early-years phonics and reading skills, with “huge success”, according to Laura Compton, the authority’s information and communications technology development officer.

In Elrick and Banchory primary schools in Aberdeenshire, P2 pupils learned how to be responsible for looking after a pet using the Nintendogs game on the Nintendo DS.

In Clepington Primary School in Dundee, Jo-Anne Bell used Mario and Sonic at the Olympics on the Wii as a hook to teach her P6 class about the solar system. Pupils were placed into teams named after planets, wrote stories about the creatures that would live there, and competed against each other every morning on the Wii.

“Before that project some would struggle to write paragraphs, have mental blocks when it came to using their imagination, some would have backgrounds they don’t want to use,” said Bell. “The volume they wrote and the creativity used was massively changed. It is about academic achievement but it’s also about enjoying school and working with peers in class.”

After last year’s trial involving a Dundee primary school class using Dr Kawashima’s Brain Training on the Nintendo DS for 20 minutes a day, which sparked a 10% improvement in their basic arithmetic, the project was rolled out to 16 other schools. The results will be revealed on Thursday at the Scottish Learning Festival.

The head teachers’ organisation, School Leaders Scotland, said while it welcomed the rise of Nintendo and Sony consoles in the classroom, it had reservations.

“It’s a great extra resource, a great motivational tool, but it has resource implications and you have to keep it in perspective of the other things that you really need to do in terms of education,” said Ken Cunningham, the general secretary. “The projects are product-dependent and not readily available to everyone all the time. They have to balance all that with all the more traditional style of teaching, the interpersonal skills. So it’s about getting the balance right.

Source: Sunday Herald
http://tinyurl.com/42tzq2

21 September, 2008. 11:29 AM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Getting Spanked for Timeouts

Momlogic’s Andrea: I thought timeouts were the progressive way to punish. But are even they too cruel?

Yesterday, when I picked my daughter up from her new preschool, the teacher told me my two-year-old was having trouble following directions that day. I nodded in weary agreement — she’s been very defiant this week.

“I give her timeouts,” I offered, “That’s what you guys do, right?”

“Oh no!”, said the young teacher, aghast. “We praise the good behavior and distract them with something else when they behave negatively.”

Oh. Crap. This discipline thing is tricky. And here I was secretly patting myself on the back for not spanking my toddler’s backside. Meanwhile, it turns out the preschool’s mode of discipline makes mine seem like Abu Ghraib. But, hey, it’s not like I’m waterboarding.

As the teacher expounded on the preschool’s principles of punishment, my mind wandered to my timeout experience the night before. My daughter was locked in her chair prison — it’s amazing to me she stays put. She can escape any time — instead, she begs for mercy. Her crime? Hitting me in the face when I tried to put on her new Dora pajamas. (Maybe I should’ve bought Diego instead?) I don’t know if “distracting” her would’ve helped either of us at that moment. It took every bit of my moral strength not to punch her back.

Has the pendulum swung too far when it comes to doling out punishment for our kids? I don’t even know ANY moms these days who spank. Maybe I’m hanging out with the wrong crowd?

Source: Mom Logic
http://www.momlogic.com/2008/09/time_outs_are_the_new_spanking.php

20 September, 2008. 1:09 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

Thousands of Five-Year-Olds Can’t Write Name after a Year at School…

… despite £12bn Spent on Nursery Education

One in seven children struggles to write his or her name after a year at primary school, official figures showed yesterday.

Fourteen per cent of five-year-olds - almost 80,000 - are unable to scribble ‘mum’, ‘dad’ or their first name from memory.

Some 11 per cent have trouble sounding out the alphabet, and four in ten cannot write a simple shopping list or letter to Father Christmas, according to assessments of pupils’ progress at the end of their reception year at primary school.

Overall, just half of the 556,000 children at this stage were judged to have reached a ‘good level of development’.

The figures, which come from the Department for Children, Schools and Families, apply to pupils in both state and private sectors. While the five-year-olds’ progress was judged to be better than last year, it was still down on 2005 in most areas.

Officials have blamed tougher assessment arrangements for the decline in results since 2005 but the Tories have warned that performance is ’slipping back’.

Ministers have also missed a 2008 target for 53 per cent of children in state-maintained schools and nurseries to meet the expected level of development.

Boys remain behind girls in all developmental areas, especially in writing, where girls are 18 points ahead.

The results mean that a majority of pupils are beginning Year 1 this month lacking key skills.

Under the Government’s system of assessments for five-year-olds, children are judged to have reached a ‘good level’ if they can show they are attentive in class; know the importance of school rules; take turns in conversation; guess at the meaning of simple sentences; write a letter to Father Christmas; blend sounds together to say simple words; and respect others.

Teachers are meant to observe children as they work and play and then record their progress.

Yesterday’s results will intensify calls for the current developmental goals in writing to be scaled back because they are too tough for young children.

One of the goals is for five-year-olds to write simple sentences using basic punctuation.

Just a quarter of youngsters met the standard this year.

Childcare experts have warned that a new ‘nappy curriculum’ being introduced this month - a statutory learning framework for children from birth to five - will put teachers under greater pressure than ever to push youngsters towards such goals.

Children will be forced into formal lessons too soon, they say.

Ministers have asked an inquiry into the primary curriculum to consider the complaints when it reports back next year.

Yesterday’s assessments also showed a persistent gap in attainment between the richest and poorest youngsters.

Children from more affluent areas are already well ahead of pupils in the most deprived parts of the country before they even start school, and the gulf shows little sign of narrowing.

Among five-year-olds in the most deprived 30 per cent of areas in the country, only 38 per cent achieved a good level of development.

This compares with 54 per cent in all other areas - a gap of 16 points. While this is down from 17 points last year, ministers missed a target aimed at reducing the gap to 12 points.

Children’s minister Beverley Hughes said the results showed ‘continued improvements’.

‘But there is more to do to ensure that all children achieve their potential, especially the most disadvantaged.’

Why teenagers are maths dunces

Half of schools are failing to teach maths properly, an Ofsted report warns today.

The education watchdog said that this means millions of teenagers are finishing compulsory education with a poor grasp of the subject.

Teachers are increasingly drilling pupils to pass exams instead of encouraging them to understand crucial maths concepts, the report adds.

Ofsted’s damning conclusion was that rising exam results owe little or nothing to better teaching or a deeper understanding among pupils.

They have instead been inflated by ‘teaching to the test’. Inspectors-also highlighted a growing-culture of dependence on quick-fix ‘booster’ classes for pupils on the borderline between grade thresholds.

Exam bodies were also criticised for designing national exams which test maths skills in bite-size chunks.

Ofsted’s verdict is embarrassing for ministers who have attempted to make political capital out of rising results.

Schools Minister Jim Knight said: ‘There is no reason why testing should result in a narrow focus or uninspiring lessons.

This year’s new secondary curriculum will help bring mathematics to life.’

Source: This is London
http://tinyurl.com/3wafrq

19 September, 2008. 1:18 PM. Link | Comments: No Comments »

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