One of my favorite consultations is with a
preschool program in Kenai, Alaska.
I began working with the Kenaitze Indian Tribe
Head Start Program during the summer of 2007. Now, 15 years later, this Program
has expanded into an Infant, Toddler, and Preschool Program. . . as well
as a Cultural Support and Instruction Program where Cultural Instructors
support their Native American students—from kindergarten through high
school—during their days in the Kenai Peninsula Borough School District, and
then in a Tribe-run afterschool program where they teach them Native dance, the
Dena’ina language, and the ten events that take place at the Native Youth
Olympics.
This past month, I was honored to work with
the staff serving all of these programs once again on-site in Alaska. During
our time together, we discussed (among many topics):
· How to teach, prompt, and reinforce important
interpersonal, social problem-solving, conflict prevention and resolution, and
emotional awareness, control, communication, and coping skills with different
toddler through high school students
· The connection between students’
physiological and neurological development and their emotional, affective, and
behavioral status and interactions
· The five building blocks of school
discipline, classroom management, and student self-management
· How to teach the Stop & Think Social
Skills Program effectively in the classroom and common areas of the school
· The characteristics of effective teaching and
differentiated instruction
· How to identify the root causes when students
present with academic problems and social, emotional, and behavioral
challenges; and how to link the results of these analyses to multi-tiered
services, supports, strategies, and interventions
· How to talk with students about their
social-emotional challenges, and how to safely and productively respond to
students when they are emotionally past the “physiological point of no return”
One of the goals was to begin this new
school year with everyone focused on both the academic and social, emotional,
and behavioral status and progress of all students, and to consistently use
effective science-to-practice and multi-tiered processes needed to accomplish
this goal.
It was a very productive and rewarding week,
and we all learned many things together through the deep discussions and the
case study applications that we shared.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Preschool and the
Pandemic
As I prepared for the week with my
colleagues, I reviewed a number of studies that have identified the impact of
the pandemic on young children. . . even as the pandemic continues.
According to a handful of studies published
within the last few months, some children born during the pandemic:
·
Are
showing below average scores on developmental tests of gross motor (e.g.,
walking), fine motor (e.g., drawing, cutting with scissors), and social and
problem-solving skills when compared with children born before the pandemic
began.
·
Are
vocalizing and engaging in verbal interactions much less frequently than their
pre-pandemic counterparts.
·
Lack a
sense of personal space and boundaries, may be more “clingy” with their
parents/guardians, and have difficulty separating from trusted
adults—especially in new or unknown settings.
·
Experienced
more family poverty and food insecurity—increasing the potential for (family)
stress and other emotional distresses.
·
Experienced
fewer routines and less predictability at home—potentially affecting their
emotional security and executive functioning skills.
_ _ _ _ _
In fact, while approximately one
in six infants, toddlers, and preschool children experienced a developmental
delay before the pandemic began, researchers in some communities are now
finding that infants born during the pandemic may have nearly twice the risk of
developmental delays specifically in communication and social development in
comparison.
While not causal, some of the
hypothesized pandemic-related reasons for these children’s challenges include:
·
Mothers’
pandemic-added stress during pregnancy, fewer in-office maternity visits with
their doctors, and parental/family stress at home after their birth.
·
The
children were sequestered at home for extended periods of time—without the
opportunity to visit, explore, interact, play, and socialize in different settings,
with different children and adults, and across different situations.
·
The use
of masks at home by parents, siblings, and extended family members (because
there was no vaccine for a while) made verbal and non-verbal communication more
difficult and restricted, and this decreased the children’s experience and
learning of sounds, words, facial expressions, and understanding of others’
verbal and non-verbal cues.
Indeed, one study noted that pandemic babies
had fewer people talking and interacting with them for less time every day.
·
More and
earlier use of computers, TV, and other devices to “entertain” these children—with
possible effects on their attention and social interactions.
·
Less
opportunity to visit their primary care physicians for preventative health and
other screenings, and to other clinicians (as indicated) for early
psychoeducational and speech/language screenings.
·
Less
opportunity for on-site, interactive, and high quality early intervention
services for students with developmental delays or disabilities, and fewer
formal early education opportunities for all children as well.
_ _ _ _ _
Some in the popular press are beginning to
call this generation of children, Generation C (COVID). While the
research (as above) is notable so far, none of us can accurately predict right
now how many children have been negatively impacted by conditions directly
related to the pandemic, how responsive they will be to strategic
interventions, and whether some of their challenges will be short-lived or more
sustained.
As always, it is important to recognize that
the challenges above must be identified on an individual child basis,
and that analyses to determine the root causes of any problems found are
essential before recommending and implementing services, supports,
strategies, and interventions.
Moreover, as appropriate, these analyses
must include assessments of the child’s status before the pandemic began,
so that issues or causes that predated the pandemic or that are not
pandemic-related can be identified and addressed.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
The Benefits of
Early Childhood Education
As noted above, most of today’s infants,
toddlers, and preschoolers did not have the benefit of attending early
childhood programs during the first two to three years of the pandemic.
At this point, given the effects of the
pandemic noted above, the pressure is now on early childhood, preschool, and
kindergarten teachers to address the significant pandemic-related gaps that
some students are experiencing.
The benefits of early childhood education
have been empirically researched and objectively documented in many studies
beginning with the Perry Preschool Project in 1962. In fact, there are quite a
number of studies that have longitudinally tracked students from their participation
in early childhood programs into adulthood—some of them (e.g., in Tennessee)
that are quite recent.
Overall, students—especially those living in
poverty—who participated in past early childhood education opportunities:
Short-Term
· Were more prepared to enter kindergarten and
succeed both academically and socially during their early elementary school
years
· Closed some of the receptive and expressive
language development gaps that they originally entered their programs with
· Were less likely to be retained during their
school careers, were less likely to need special education services, and were
more likely to graduate from high school. . . with higher SAT scores
_ _ _ _ _
Long-Term
· Were more likely to graduate from college, to
be employed full-time, to own a car and home, and to be less likely to live in
poverty as adults
· Had more positive social interactions as
adults, had more positive relationships with family members, and were more
community-focused
· Were less likely to have substance abuse
problems, to have run-ins with the law, and to be incarcerated as juveniles
We expect these same results to occur for today’s
(pandemic-affected) students in need—even though some educators point to
research showing that some of the academic gains above dissipate by the end of
Grade 3.
The need right now is too great to wait.
Educators need to focus more on the long-term
high school through adulthood outcomes. Even if the “disappearing” Grade 3
academic results are fully accurate, this does not mean that early childhood education
has no “long-term” effects. Indeed, consider where the children in the Perry
Preschool (and other) study(ies) would have scored academically at the end of
Grade 3 had they not participated in their early childhood programs!
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
What Should Early Childhood, Preschool, and
Kindergarten Teachers. . . Schools and Districts Do?
And so. . . the
pressure is on our early childhood, preschool, and kindergarten teachers, their
administrators and support staff. . . and their schools and districts.
More than ever
before, the teachers, administrators, and support staff need to screen and
validate the students who are developmentally delayed, in what areas, and for
what reasons. But they also need to recognize, within the wide range of
normative behavior, the students who are performing well and as expected.
To address the
needs of the infants, toddlers, and preschoolers who are behind due to
pandemic-related factors, schools and districts need to immediately attend to
the following three important areas:
·
Child Find;
·
Completing Social-Developmental Histories; and
·
Providing Effective and Compensatory Educational
Services and Supports
Recommendation #1: Child Find
Child Find is
required by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA, 2004) for
both infants and toddlers (Part C) and school-aged students (Part B). All
school districts receiving federal funding are required to have a systematic
Child Find system and process so that infant through school-aged (i.e., high
school) children and adolescents with suspected developmental delays (Part C)
or disabilities (Parts C and B) are identified as early as possible, are found
eligible for special education services (or not), and receive those services
and interventions (if qualified).
This early
identification and intervention responsibility is especially important right
now given the infant, toddler, and preschool status and information described
above.
According to
special education law (IDEA, Part B):
300.111 Child find.
(a) General.
(1) The State must have in effect
policies and procedures to ensure that—
(i) All children with
disabilities residing in the State, including children with disabilities who
are homeless children or are wards of the State, and children with disabilities
attending private schools, regardless of the severity of their disability, and
who are in need of special education and related services, are identified,
located, and evaluated; and
(ii) A
practical method is developed and implemented to determine which children are
currently receiving needed special education and related services.
(b) Use
of term developmental delay. The following provisions apply with respect to
implementing the child find requirements of this section:
(1) A State that adopts a
definition of developmental delay under §300.8(b) determines whether the term
applies to children aged three through nine, or to a subset of that age range
(e.g., ages three through five).
(2) A State may not require an
LEA to adopt and use the term developmental delay for any children within its
jurisdiction.
(3) If an LEA uses the term
developmental delay for children described in §300.8(b), the LEA must conform
to both the State’s definition of that term and to the age range that has been
adopted by the State.
(4) If a State does not adopt the
term developmental delay, an LEA may not independently use that term as a basis
for establishing a child’s eligibility under this part.
(c) Other
children in child find. Child find also must include—
(1) Children who are suspected of
being a child with a disability under §300.8 and in need of special education,
even though they are advancing from grade to grade; and
(2) Highly mobile children,
including migrant children.
(d) Construction.
Nothing in the Act requires that children be classified by their disability so
long as each child who has a disability that is listed in §300.8 and who, by
reason of that disability, needs special education and related services is
regarded as a child with a disability under Part B of the Act.
_ _ _ _ _
According to the Early Childhood Technical Assistance Center:
Regulations for Part C
of IDEA require each state to have a comprehensive child find system for
the purposes of identifying, locating, and evaluating all infants and toddlers
with disabilities ages birth–2 as early as possible. The system must be
consistent with Part B, and also meet additional requirements.
The lead
agency—with the assistance of the state interagency coordinating
council—ensures that the system is coordinated with all other major efforts to
locate and identify young children by other state agencies and programs
including:
·
Maternal, Infant, and Early Childhood Home Visiting (MIECHV)
Programs;
·
Early Periodic Screening, Diagnosis, and Treatment (EPSDT);
·
health;
·
Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP);
·
Early Hearing Detection and Intervention (EDHI);
·
education;
·
Early Head Start;
·
child protection and child welfare programs, including foster care
and CAPTA;
·
programs that provide services under the Family Violence Prevention
and Services Act; and
·
child care programs, and tribal agencies.
Part C eligibility is determined
by each state's definition of an infant or toddler with a disability (34 CFR §303.21) which must include:
an infant or toddler with a developmental delay and an infant or toddler with
diagnosed physical or mental conditions with a high probability of resulting in
developmental delay.
Developmental delay is
"measured by appropriate diagnostic instruments and procedures" to
determine the developmental functioning in each of the 5 developmental areas:
cognitive, physical including vision and hearing, communication, social or
emotional, and adaptive.
Included in the
evaluation process is the use of the informed clinical opinion of professionals
experienced with development of infants and toddlers.
An infant or toddler
with diagnosed physical or mental conditions with a high probability of
resulting in developmental delay include such conditions as chromosomal
abnormalities; genetic or congenital disorders; sensory impairments; inborn
errors of metabolism; disorders reflecting disturbance of the development of
the nervous system; congenital infections; severe attachment disorders; and
disorders secondary to exposure to toxic substances, including fetal alcohol
syndrome.
States may choose to
serve children at risk for disabilities in their eligibility definition (34 CFR §303.21).
_ _ _ _ _
Recommendation #2: Completing Social and
Developmental Histories with Parents/Guardians
As part of the
early education and Child Find process, I believe that teachers and related
service professionals at the early childhood, preschool, and kindergarten need
to become proficient in interviewing parents, guardians, or other caretakers using
a sound Social and Developmental History Questionnaire.
These
questionnaires help to collect and organize historical and present status information
about an individual child from birth (or before) to the present in a number of
important home, school, and other developmental areas. And this information
will help to differentiate between student challenges that existed before the
pandemic, that may be related to the pandemic, and that began during the
pandemic, but are unrelated to it.
Critically, most
Social and Developmental History Questionnaires ask questions in the following
areas:
·
General Information: Includes questions
about the history, background, and status of the child and his/her family.
·
Health and Development: Includes
questions about prenatal to post-natal status and health, infancy through
current age developmental milestones and status, and family history and status.
·
Behavior:
Includes questions related to infancy and about early temperament; social-emotional
development and current status; behavioral interactions at home, with peers,
and in other settings; responses to frustration and discipline; and responsibilities,
independence, and self-help interactions at home.
·
Education and Learning: Includes
questions about academic history and status, feelings toward learning and
school, need for educational support and/or special education, and social and
peer interactions at school.
·
Family and Other Stressors: Includes
questions about critical life, medical, or other stress-related events
experienced by or around the child.
Every educator who
completes a Social and Developmental Questionnaire with a parent/guardian
should be trained beforehand to a specific level of expertise. Schools should consider
using collegial dyads—pairing a teacher and a related service professional (a
counselor, school psychologist, social worker)—whenever a social and
developmental history interview is completed with a child’s parents or
guardians.
Social and
Developmental History Questionnaires should be used only for those children exhibiting
one or more important developmental gaps or experiencing a significant, problematic
early childhood event. They also should be an inherent part of a school or
district’s Child Find and/or multi-tiered service and support team (MTSS)
process.
_ _ _ _ _
Recommendation #3: Provide Effective and
Compensatory Educational Services and Supports for Infants, Toddlers, and
Preschoolers
This final
recommendation emphasizes the importance of high-quality, evidence-based
instruction for all “Generation C” infants, toddlers, and preschoolers. As
above, this instruction should be supplemented by strategic or intensive
services, supports, strategies, or interventions for students needing more
multi-tiered attention.
The “core”
instruction must focus on teaching these children the many
developmentally-anchored pre-academic and social-emotional skills that they
need—starting from where they are currently functioning, and factoring in their
developmental histories and service and support needs.
To provide a
roadmap for this process, we suggest a review of a recent (August, 2022)
publication from the U.S. Department of Education’s Institute of Educational
Services (Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance Center).
[CLICK HERE for “Preparing Young
Children for School”]
The Introduction to
this Practice Guide states:
The education children receive in preschool can
prepare them to benefit from the learning opportunities they will encounter in
elementary school. Children who learn social-emotional and executive function skills in
preschool, for example, may be better
able to maintain positive relationships, follow directions, exhibit self-control, and learn to
deal more successfully with problem situations. Similarly, children who are
exposed to and have gain a deeper foundational
understanding of mathematics, language, letters, sounds, and print material. By
learning social-emotional, executive function, mathematics, and literacy skills
in preschool, children are likely to be better prepared for the higher
expectations and more formal curriculum in elementary school.
While written for
all preschoolers, we think that the Guide’s seven practice recommendations and
five “overarching” themes can easily be adapted for use with most Generation C
infants, toddlers, and preschoolers.
The seven
practice recommendations are:
1. Regularly
provide intentional, engaging instruction and practice focused on
social-emotional skills.
2.
Strengthen children's executive function skills
using specific games and activities.
3.
Provide intentional instruction to build
children’s understanding of mathematical ideas and skills.
4.
Engage children in conversations about
mathematical ideas and support them in using mathematical language.
5.
Intentionally plan activities to build
children’s vocabulary and language.
6.
Build children’s knowledge of letters and
sounds.
7.
Use shared book reading to develop children’s
language, knowledge of print features, and knowledge of the world.
_ _ _ _ _
The five
overarching themes, according to the Guide are “central to providing
instruction in preschool. Quoting from the Guide, these themes are:
Theme #1. The importance of intentional instruction
The panel believes preschool instruction should be focused, deliberate, and purposeful in directly addressing the specific learning objectives of the lesson. Teachers should set up lessons to include conversations and activities to intentionally help children learn a skill or concept, as well as ample repetition and review to clarify and support learning of both newly learned and previously learned skills and topics. Intentional instruction also includes repeated opportunities for children to practice what they are learning. Teachers can provide specific praise to highlight and reinforce the desired behavior, skill, or understanding children demonstrate as they practice what they learned.
_ _ _ _ _
Theme #2. The importance
of interaction and conversation
The panel believes that interaction plays a pivotal role in children’s learning. Supportive interactions between teachers and children that are essential for this age need to be prioritized. Children learn more from conversing with the teacher
than from listening to teachers talk for extended periods.
The panel suggests giving children multiple opportunities to engage in group or one-on-one multi-turn conversations. During these conversations, children can be encouraged to talk about the skills and concepts they are learning in a back-and-forth conversation with the teacher
and/or other children. Teachers can also lead interactive activities, such as playing games, singing songs, and reading books, to engage children in learning. These activities should be relevant to and supportive of a wide variety of cultural backgrounds and social experiences.
Developmentally appropriate instruction for children ages 3–5 involves hands-on activities that keep them engaged. Requiring children to sit still for more
than 10–15 minutes, to listen to
an adult talking for an extended period, or to complete a worksheet are not appropriate expectations for children ages 3–5. To maintain children’s
engagement, choose hands-on instructional activities,
keep verbal instructions short, and allow children many opportunities to contribute to conversations.
_ _ _ _ _
Theme #3. The importance of lessons building sequentially
The panel believes that each area of learning—social-emotional, executive function,
mathematics, and literacy—should proceed in a sequential manner,
deliberately and systematically building skills and knowledge.
New learning should
proceed in a sequenced order, from easy
to more difficult skills and concepts, and be based on knowledge of young children’s natural development. Teaching of new concepts and skills should build on what children know, adding more challenge as children learn and leading toward skills/knowledge that will help children succeed in kindergarten.
The panel recommends choosing an evidence-based program or curriculum developed by content experts that follows a sequence of topics in social-emotional, executive function, mathematics, and literacy. Following a sequential program or curriculum, rather
than piecing together
a variety of activities, can help ensure that learning is being addressed in a developmentally appropriate way.
_ _ _ _ _
Theme #4. The importance
of scheduling time for intentional learning
The panel recommends developing a schedule in which intentional instruction time is devoted on a consistent basis to social-emotional learning, executive function,
mathematics, and literacy. Note that the amount of time spent on these areas of instruction will vary depending on the length of the preschool day.
The panel emphasizes that each of these intentional instruction times should fit into the daily routine and accompany the learning opportunities that occur throughout the day. Intentional instructional time can, for example, be embedded into large-group and small-group
activities. Large-group instructional activities
can be used to provide a brief explanation or demonstration but should be quickly accompanied by hands-on, engaging activities.
_ _ _ _ _
Theme #5. The importance
of recognizing everyone’s backgrounds and experiences
The panel recognizes that children come from a wide variety of cultural, racial, and linguistic backgrounds and have different
social experiences. The panel believes that preschools should reflect and value the cultural, racial, and linguistic backgrounds of the children, teachers, and community, and provide opportunities for children to learn about various cultures in meaningful ways.
To make learning more relevant, engaging, and interesting for all children, the panel suggests using culturally responsive practices.
The work of incorporating these practices
into current materials or curricula may need to be done in collaboration
with a curriculum or preschool director.
Teachers can consider the following ways of engaging with young children from diverse backgrounds:
Ø
Learn about the children, their families, and their communities and use this knowledge to adapt teaching, materials, and classroom setup.
Ø
Ensure classroom teaching materials, such as posters, books, toys, and songs reflect the diversity of the children in the classroom so that children see someone
who looks like them.
Ø
Seek out books that include characters with whom children and their families share identities; ensure that the characters in the books are presented in authentic and positive ways.
Ø
Encourage children and families to bring their traditions and culturally important experiences to school to share.
Ø
Display real pictures of the teachers, children,
their families, and their
communities.
Ø
Include meaningful, engaging activities from various communities and cultures in the classroom community such as food, music, literature, and celebrations.
Ø
Read books about different
cultures, traditions, countries, and regions of the world.
Ø
Interact with children in a way that delivers positive messages about their self-identity.
Ø
Place children in diverse, heterogeneous groups, including, for example, children from homes with differing primary or home languages, income levels, or cultural backgrounds.
This Blog first
reported the results of a number of recent studies and their descriptions of
some of the delays exhibited by infants, toddlers, and preschoolers who have
grown up during the pandemic.
It then discussed
some of the pandemic-related reasons why infants born during the pandemic appear to have nearly twice the risk of
developmental delay—specifically in communication and social development—when
compared with pre-pandemic infants.
Instead, we recommended the importance of evaluating
individual children as needed, determining the pre-pandemic, pandemic-related,
and pandemic-unrelated root causes of any problems found, and linking the
evaluation results to specific services, supports, strategies, and
interventions.
Finally, we reviewed the
previously-identified short- and long-term benefits of early childhood
education and intervention. And then we detailed what early childhood,
preschool, and kindergarten teachers, administrators, and support staff need to
do for today’s Generation C children—supported in three areas by their schools
and districts: Child Find, the use of Social-Developmental Histories,
and the implementation of effective
and compensatory educational services and supports.
The academic and
social, emotional, and behavioral progress of many students—from preschool
through high school—was negatively impacted during the pandemic. While we must
address the needs of all of these students, the developmental gaps
experienced by our infants, toddlers, preschoolers, and kindergarteners are
especially important given the neurological development that occurs during
these years.
Educators, schools,
and districts must “reach down” to these children in order to “raise them up”
with the most strategic and intensive services and supports needed.
If we are going to
weather the long-term effects of the pandemic, it will be through our attention
to early childhood instruction and interventions. This has always been our
investment in the future. It now must be our investment to the present.
As always, I hope that this Blog has provided
an opportunity to think more broadly about the issues confronting educators,
schools, districts, and others in the field today. And I hope that the
information discussed will create a path toward more effective solutions on
behalf of our students.
I appreciate the time that you invested in
reading this Blog, and your dedication to your students, colleagues, and the
educational process—especially at the beginning of this new school year.
And please know that I am always happy to
provide any initial Zoom consultation needed by you and your colleagues without
charge.