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29 skills a child should bring to kindergarten |
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Written by Linda Morgan
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Aug 01, 2006 |
The first day of kindergarten is typically loaded with hurdles for just about everyone.
For starters, the child is thrown into an unfamiliar environment full
of strange grown-ups who show a curious penchant for decorating
bulletin boards.
Then, parents are confronted with all the angst that comes with
relinquishing their little one to an institution that they hope will
start that child down a path of intellectual proficiency.
And the teacher is facing a classroom of kids who may or may not arrive
ready to make the transition into the social, academic and highly
structured world of the American educational system we call "school."
How can kids, parents and teachers navigate those early days? The
secret is good preparation, educators say. And parents can help that
preparation happen.
Of course, getting kids "school ready" begins in infancy when parents
and caretakers help babies develop language, motor and coping skills.
But in the days and weeks before kindergarten, parents can help their
new kindergarteners get ready in more practical ways.
Diana Miller, kindergarten teacher at Cougar Ridge Elementary in
Issaquah, suggests playing the "school" game at with children at
dinnertime. "Tell the kids to raise their hand - and then call on
them," she says.
Parents can help diffuse their kids' anxiety by visiting the school
building and letting their children play on the outside equipment, she
says. "That gives kids more of a comfort zone."
And parents should continue to read, read, read. "It's amazing how that
helps," Miller says. "I can always tell the kids who've been read to.
They know the beginning and end of book, they can predict what's going
to happen next in the story, and they're often the ones who read early.
They understand the world around them so much better."
Above all, she says, kids should know that their parents think school
is important. "Tell them it's their job to go to school and do their
best," Miller says.
What else should children know by the time they start kindergarten?
Here's a list of 29 skills they should have, according to Miller, Susan
Wickersham-Berg, a kindergarten teacher at Evergreen Elementary in
Edmonds and Clover Codd, principal at Loyal Heights Elementary in
Ballard:
Kindergarteners should come to school able to:
- Clean up their own personal space, including work tools and toys.
- Hold a pencil or a crayon and be able to color.
- Print their name.
- Understand that hitting and yelling are not acceptable.
- Know basic colors and simple shapes.
- Know their first and last names, their telephone number and at least some of their address.
- Know how to unzip their backpack and put things in it.
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Manage eating and drinking. They should know how to handle the
containers in their lunch box, and how to poke a straw into a juice box.
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Take care of themselves in the bathroom. This means zipping, tying,
knowing how to use a belt if they're wearing one and washing their
hands.
- Know the teacher's name and what to call her (or him).
- Tie (or Velcro) their shoes and put on their coats, button or zip their jackets.
- Know their bus number if they ride the bus.
- Realize there will be many other children in the class and that they will have to share the teacher's time.
- Cover their mouth when coughing or sneezing.
- Follow safety rules such as walking in a line in the halls, and holding hands and looking both ways when crossing the street.
- Share materials and toys with others.
- Describe how their actions might impact others.
- Show concern about fairness.
- Work on a task over a period of time.
- Sustain attention for activities such as story time and show and tell. They should be able to sit quietly and listen to others.
- Explain why simple events occurred.
- Represent simple objects through drawing.
- Count to 31.
- Sort objects into categories.
- Retell a story in a sequential order.
- Follow two- or three-part directions, such as "we're going to put backpacks away, take our folders out and hang up our coats."
- Match pictures with letters such as B for ball or A for apple.
- Begin to recognize vowel sounds.
- Identify upper- and lower-case letters.
Linda Morgan writes frequently on education issues for ParentMap.
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