Title: The Role of Partnerships in Transition to Kindergarten
1The Role of Partnerships in Transition to
Kindergarten
Sharon Rosenkoetter, Ph.D. Oregon State
University sharon.rosenkoetter_at_oregonstate.edu
- Ready Schools Council of Chief State School
Officers - November 3, 2005
- Atlanta, Georgia
Sticks in a bundle are unbreakable. --Bandei
Proverb
2- National Early Childhood Transition Center
- USDE-funded Center
- Research training
- Children with disabilities
- --In general
- --Cultural/linguistic differences
- --Significant disabilities
- Based at UKY
- 5 universities
- --LSU Medical Center
- --University of North CarolinaChapel Hill
- --Oregon State University
- --University of WisconsinMilwaukee
- Builds on many years of work by principal
researchers as well as transition work by many
others
3Also
- Early Childhood Leadership Directions
- -- USDE leadership development model featuring
collaboration - Oregon SIG Project on building systems capacity
- -- SAMHSA model called
- Starting Early Starting Smart
4 Purpose Develop systems of support
partnerships --during the years before and after
transition to ? Engage families of young
children in their childrens learning
? Build families strengths support their
victory over challenges through ongoing
community supports, and ? Help build
stronger learning opportunities
for their children
5Transition to Kindergarten (1st Grade)
- Practice for a lifetime of change
- Milestone for children and families
- Beginning of an on-the-record trajectory for
success or failure in school - Can employ effective practices that have been
widely shared for 25 years - Collaborative planning, involving families,
preparing/welcoming children are key elements - --Pianta Cox, 1999 Rosenkoetter et al., 1994
6Our Vision of Successful Transition.
7Nevertheless
- Transition has numerous organizational
complexities - These often result in problems for
- -- Children (especially those with
challenges) - -- Families (especially those who dont
feel comfortable in school), and - -- Professionals who provide services
8National Early Childhood Transition Center
From Rous, Hallam, Harbin, McCormick, Jung, 2005
9From Rous, Hallam, Harbin, McCormick, Jung, 2005
Complex interactions among multiple systems
10Most work has been here appropriately so!
2
1
Kagan Keynote
From Rous, Hallam, Harbin, McCormick, Jung, 2005
3
11Essential of Partnerships for Transition in
Ready Schools
- 1. Relationships
- with families
- 2. Interagency
- structures
- 3. Interagency
- communication
- relationships
Opening the door to success. --National Early
Childhood Transition Center
121. Research on partnerships with families
- Significant finding Parent involvement is a
major influence on childrens school achievement
involvement with school involvement with
childrens learning - Parent involvement is an important component of
successful transition to kindergarten both a
predictor for a result of successful transition - Research shows that most school-family
communications are formalized school-directed. - -- Christenson, 1999 Dogaru, 2005 Ramey et
al., 2000 Pianta Cox, 1999
READY SCHOOLS smooth the transition between home
school
13Two views of the role of families in schools
- 1. Schools guide parents to help attain
the schools agenda for the child - most common approach of elementary schools
- OR
- 2. Shared responsibility for nurturing
children, mutual support, emphasis on
partnership -- approach of many
prekindergartens, some schools - -- Dogaru, 2005 Ramey et al., 2000 Pianta
Cox, 1999
It is in the shelter of each other that people
live. -- Irish Proverb
14Differences in expectations for family roles
- Can be very difficult for some families
- Head Start families are used to partnership
- Challenges are greatest for families from other
cultures, who speak a language other than
English, or who have special concerns about their
children i.e., families less comfortable with
the schools ways services - Research says Teachers agree that recommended
transition practices for relating to families are
sound but say that they do not have time - --Vaughn, Reiss, Rothlein, Hughes, 1999
15READY SCHOOLS
- Develop respectful partnerships with families
- --Provide a menu of options for communications
volunteer opportunities - --Elicit their dreams for their children,
family stories - --Help them find community services that meet
their needs - Lead in changing attitudes
- --Share ideas for two-way communication with
families - --Consider appointing a volunteer coordinator
- Give special welcome to families from other
cultures/ languages - --Use cultural mentors to support staff
learning about cultural values
preferences - --Interpret school practices WHY are we doing
this? - --Celebrate diversity in meaningful ways
- Support home learning, by providing
intergenerational activities, affirming family
ideas, celebrating family projects - Henderson
Berla, 1994
16- Schools must be in the business of education,
prevention intervention
Long term support Special Interventions
Pyramid of Education/Health/Mental Health Services
Short term crisis support- Intervention
Support for all children, all families-- Education
Prevention
An effective service system meets families where
they are with services that families need
172. Interagency structures for partnership
- Two kinds are relevant
- Community interagency councils related to
children and families - Interagency transition planning
18READY SCHOOLS serve children in the community
Community interagency councils for children
families
- Community planning for young children families
needs input from schools - Schools need to gain partners in overcoming
challenges that face our families their
children - see list of potential partners
- Many prevention intervention challenges of
children families need wrap-around services
19Some options
- School personnel can participate in their
local commissions on children families - see community self assessment
- Schools can become hubs for a variety of
services - -- 21st Century Schools
- -- Communities in Schools
- School personnel can know about community
services see as their mission to connect
families to them - To keep a lamp burning, we have to keep putting
oil in it. - --Mother Teresa
20Some options
- Schools must have 2-way partnerships with many
different community agencies - Within schools, participation with other
community agencies MUST be valued, planned,
systematic - People do things for people, not systems.
- --Martha Staker, Early Head Start, KC,KS
21Characteristics of a vigorous community system
- Relationships
- Meaningful tasks and roles
- Learning together
If ever there was a time to stand up, speak out,
and act courageously to defend our children from
fear and want, this is it --Marian
Wright Edelman
22Interagency Transition Planning
- Requires a community plan timelines among preK
school programs either schools or preK can
convene meeting see checklist provided in
notebook - Plan timelines should be incorporated into a
memorandum of understanding that is
reviewed/revised annually -
- Collaboratively develop MOU to create stability
in local transition practices even if personnel
change - Each sending receiving program should appoint a
Transition Coordinator who informs other staff
contributes to event planning -
23Interagency Transition Planning
-
- Transition events should feature interpreters as
needed to welcome ASL- or non-English speaking
families - Consider how to meet, in the community,
childrens comprehensive needs that are no longer
met by the preK program to do this, first assess
families needs - Families children should learn in the Spring
what to expect in the Fall - Accommodations for children with special needs or
language challenges should be in place before
school starts
24Interagency Transition Planning
- Families should know whom to call and that it is
OK to call if they have questions - Home visits, individual family-child-teacher time
prior to school, or at least beginning with
partial-class-sized group meetings build psoitive
relationships among children, families,
teachers - Transition is a shared success family, sending
staff, receiving staff, and community partners - No member of a crew is praised for the rugged
- individuality of his rowing.
- --Ralph Waldo Emerson
253. Interagency relationships communication
- Participants are cognizant of the different
cultures of prekindergarten kindergarten - They reach out to one another with respect,
shared training, book discussion groups,
classroom exchanges, joint grant projects - School personnel work closely with preKs to
provide continuity and welcome for children
families - All look for ways to smooth transition,
especially for children with limited English
proficiency disabilities
READY SCHOOLS strive for continuity between early
care education programs elementary schools
26If you want to get an idea across, wrap it up in
a person. -- Ralph Bunche
- Build planning for /with families, interagency
structures, interagency communication around
family stories family issues - Leaders must stress the importance of these
concepts - to creating Ready Schools
- Use checklists provided
The key to success is simple. Make people
dream. -- Grard De Nerval
27For More NECTC Informationhttp//www.ihdi.uky.edu
/nectc
- Teri Nowak, Project Coordinator
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- Development Institute
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