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Re: Why not let kids be kids?



Hi, Jerry. I'm in an either/or mood, so forgive me if this seems reductive. But here we go:

We're either serious about keeping kids in school and raising graduation rates -- esp. for low-income minority kids -- or we're not serious.

If we're serious about wanting to keep kids in school, it's vital that school be fun, interesting, and relevant from the very beginning of the school experience. It matters not a whit if there is rigor, rigor, rigor starting in pre-K. When this rigor turns to rigor mortis, kids will drop out of school in even larger numbers than they currently are. I think people either get this or not.

I got this after watching my daughter in her pre-K class during the academic/rigor portion of the class. She, along with most of the other 4 and 5 year olds, were very quiet, very still, and behaving very well. They also looked catatonic, a rather shocking site when observing groups of very young children.

If people don't get the rigor mortis/catatonia thing, then they're clearly not serious about keeping kids in school and raising graduation rates -- esp. for low-income minority kids.

I think it would be helpful to make this argument as clear as possible as part of our strategic communication on this issue.

Peter


On Mar 18, 2008, at 6:02 AM, gbracey1@verizon.net wrote:

Peter,

The short answer is, adults decide. The decisions can be stupid ones, but
adults need to decide. Recall that in Linda's chapter comparing the
curriculum at the wealthy school, Crofton, adults have made very different
decisions.

At the preschool age, instruction needn't be formal. When I was at Indiana
University, we ran a preschool developed around ideas of informal education.
For instance, everyday the kids cooked something. They thought they were
having fun making something good to eat. WE thought they were learning the
rudiments of physics, chemistry, and mathematics. Not to mention fine motor
skills (they had to handle the spoons and cups), measurement (tsp vs. Tbsp),
reading (the recipe was on paper in large print on a board), and the
importance of following a sequence (one of the more important life skills).

We had no "outcome" measure, but we thought the experience was decent, maybe
even vital.





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