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posted by n1 on Tuesday June 06 2017, @03:05PM   Printer-friendly
from the or-send-'em-down-the-mines dept.

The New York Times reports:

As school reformers nationwide push to expand publicly funded prekindergarten and enact more stringent standards, more students are being exposed at ever younger ages to formal math and phonics lessons [...]. That has worried some education experts and frightened those parents who believe that children of that age should be playing with blocks, not sitting still as a teacher explains a shape's geometric characteristics.

But now a new national study suggests that preschools that do not mix enough fiber into their curriculum may be doing their young charges a disservice.

The study found that by the end of kindergarten, children who had attended one year of "academic-oriented preschool" outperformed peers who had attended less academic-focused preschools by, on average, the equivalent of two and a half months of learning in literacy and math.

"Simply dressing up like a firefighter or building an exquisite Lego edifice may not be enough," said Bruce Fuller, the lead author of the study, conducted by researchers at the University of California, Berkeley. "If you can combine creative play with rich language, formal conversations and math concepts, that's more likely to yield the cognitive gains we observed."

U.S. News published a related piece recently arguing for more attention to preschool curricula and specific content, in addition to other measures of preschool programs. In contrast, a story in the Atlantic last year pointed out new "academic" approaches to preschool may actually be doing more harm than good. And any immediate gains (as cited in the new study) frequently turn out to be temporary. One oft-cited alternative is Finland's approach, which delays formal schooling until age 7, after a year of relatively unstructured government-mandated kindergarten.


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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by deimtee on Wednesday June 07 2017, @03:07AM

    by deimtee (3272) on Wednesday June 07 2017, @03:07AM (#521736) Journal

    wow, different results in different studies. It's almost like children are not all identical little bricks in the wall. Just as a far out theory, maybe some do better with structure and guidance, while others do better without. /end sarcasm.

    I would think that the type of intellect and self-confidence level of the child would have the largest effects here. Insecure (probably introvert) kids want rules, logical structures and guidance. Confident, boisterous, extroverts want to run free. Both types of intellect have their advantages and disadvantages, which is why neither has died out. Society does best with a mix.
    Perhaps they should cater to all types, rather than one style fits all.

    ps. Anyone who thinks kids that young don't already have individual intellectual styles has not paid attention when dealing with kids.

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