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Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development www.readyfreddy.org Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success in Elementary School?

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Page 1: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Ken Smythe-LeisticoAssistant Director

University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Developmentwww.readyfreddy.org

Kindergarten Readiness:What Predicts Success in Elementary School?

Page 2: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Bogs – N – Frogs

• Description of Successful Transition• Getting Kids “Ready”• Promising and Established Practices• Ready Freddy• Oh, Hoppy Day

Page 3: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Predicting School Success

• What ‘factors’ of a child’s early life would predict how well they do in Kindergarten?

Page 4: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Let’s go back further…

Factors that influence early success

• Tied to the experiences of early childhood

• Strong influence of income

• Protective factor of parent involvement

Page 5: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

AGE APPROPRIATE BOOKS IN HOME

0

50

100

150

200

High Income Middle Income Low Income

Differences in Opportunities

Page 6: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Get Ready Freddy!

Helping parents find their role

Page 7: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

What’s a frog gotta do?

Hop, hop, hop!

Ribbit, ribbit, ribbit!

Figure out those pesty flies!

Page 8: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Hop, hop, hop!

Figure out those

Ribbit, ribbit, ribbit!

pesty flies!

Talk, talk, talk!

Do things alone!

Notice, think, and

solve!

Page 9: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

How do you help kids learn more words?

Talk, talk, talk!

Page 10: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Language • The more words a child knows at 3, the better

his reading is later• 3-year-olds whose parents went to college

know more than twice as many words as other kids

• By the time they are 4, low-income kids have heard about 32 million words less than high-income kids

Page 11: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

How else do you help kids learn more words?

Read, read, read!

Page 12: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Number of Rare Words

0

20

40

60

80

Newspaper Children's Book Adult talking to 3-year old

Why read aloud?

Page 13: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

How do you help kids notice, think and solve?

Respond, respond, respond!

Page 14: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

• The strange thing about independence: Children do not learn to be independent without help

• Children who have the most responsive parents at 2 years old, have the highest achievement scores in elementary school

• “Responsive” means to recognize needs and support learning with help

Do things alone!

Page 15: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

TransitionWhat is it and why is

it so important?

Page 16: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Views on Transition

• National Center for Early Development and Learning

Page 17: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Impact of Transition

Page 18: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Path to School Success

Enrollment• Outreach• Community

Engagement

Quality Kindergarten Transition• Relationship

building• School visits• Prepare for new

roles

Successful Start• 1st Day Attendance• Teacher-family

partnership

Success in School• Engaged Parents• Ongoing

attendance• Academic Success

Page 19: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Enrollment: Did you know?

• Every year, Schools struggles to ensure Kindergarten students are enrolled early enough to allow for transition opportunities.

Page 20: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Quality Transition: Did you Know?

• Nationally, teachers report that 48% of children beginning kindergarten struggle with the transition to school.

Page 21: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Quality Transition

• Kindergarten transition is a series of events and interactions that foster relationships between rising kindergarten families and school personnel while promoting comfort in the facility and reducing anxieties for all.

Page 22: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Successful Start: Did you know?

• Being present the first day seems to matter

– Children who were PRESENT on the first day of Kindergarten missed an average of 9 days of Kindergarten

– Children who were ABSENT on the first day of Kindergarten missed an average of 18 days of Kindergarten

• PPS School A 2009-2010

Page 23: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Success in School: Did you know?

• Nationally every year, 1 in 10 kindergarten students misses a month of school

• In low income areas this ratio of chronic absence is 1 in 4

• Of those chronically absent in Kindergarten, only 17% are reading at grade level in the 3rd grade.

• www.attendanceworks.org

Page 24: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Longitudinally, kindergarten attendance is one of the strongest early predictors of high school drop out

Page 25: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Problem Statement Review

• Nationally– Only 14 states mandate Kindergarten attendanceAs many as 50% of entering Kindergarten students

had not attended preschool

• Locally (Pennsylvania)– As few as 25% of Kindergarten students are

enrolled and attend the first day of school– School is NOT mandated until age 8

Page 26: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Why a frog???

Page 27: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Message is stronger…

Page 28: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Parent voice

Page 29: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Spread the word through print

• Displayed giant banner announcing the week

• Developed posters and flyers that were displayed in businesses and community agencies

• Had flyers put on every pizza box delivered by one local pizza shop

Page 30: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

And prepared for Welcome

• New Welcome Signs• Frog “footprints”

directing to the office

Page 31: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success
Page 32: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Enrollment:Lessons learned

• Be visible• Be strategic• Be concrete• Be welcoming• Be simple

Page 33: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Resources • Strategies, tools, and national literature

• Samples and full curricula

• Videos of events and parent voice

• Materials for families

Page 34: Ken Smythe-Leistico Assistant Director University of Pittsburgh Office of Child Development  Kindergarten Readiness: What Predicts Success

Keeping in TouchKen Smythe-Leistico

[email protected]

(412) 383-5385

www.readyfreddy.org

Facebook: Ready Freddy

Twitter: @pittreadyfreddy