Why Is School Readiness Important?
If your child is old enough to start kindergarten soon, you may wonder “Is he/she ready for school?”
Kindergarten marks the start of a child’s formal education. A child’s first school experience can significantly influence the way they learn and how they relate to others for the rest of their life.
Success or failure during this important phase can significantly affect their self-esteem, motivation and well-being.
8 universities jointly analyzed studies involving more than 35,000 preschoolers and found that children who scored higher in school readiness were more likely to have higher academic performance later.
These children are also less likely to become teen parents, engage in crime, or become unemployed as adults.
Although these studies do not prove cause-and-effect, they do show high correlations.
It would be wise to recognize the factors contributing to a child’s school readiness and make sure that when your child begins kindergarten, he or she is ready to learn and to participate in classroom activities.
All Early Experiences Matter
For better or worse, all of a child’s early experiences, whether at home, in preschool, or in other child care settings, are educational.
The settings in which young children grow and develop, and the interactions and experiences they encounter in these highly formative years, set the stage for later learning.
When early experiences are positive, consistent, developmentally sound, and emotionally supportive, they have positive effects on children’s development and on their readiness to learn.
What Contributes To School Readiness
In a joint research by 8 universities worldwide, 6 studies including more than 35,000 children were analyzed.In these studies, children’s academic skills, attention and socioemotional behaviors were measured at school entry (around age 5 or 6) and later academic achievement was measured between the ages of 7 and 14. It was found that the strongest predictors of later academic achievement are school-entry math, reading, and attention skills.
Moreover, rudimentary mathematics skills appeared to matter the most, then reading skills and finally attention.
A later study based on the same data added fine motor skills and early comprehension of the world as two new indicators in addition to children’s attention.
These two factors are stronger predictors of later performance than math and reading previously found.
So there you are:
To help your child become school ready and perform well academically upon entering kindergarten, you can start with strengthening these skills — general knowledge of the world, fine motor, math, reading/vocabulary and attention. There are several other elements that can help your child become school ready and thrive in kindergarten and later in life — language, social-emotional competence, creativity and gross motor development.
How to Attain School Readiness
The American Academy of Pediatrics suggest parents do the “5 Rs” of early education to support healthy brain development and to proactively build the critical social-emotional-language skills. The 5 Rs are:
- Read (reading skills) together everyday.
- Rhyme (reading skills), play (all skills) and cuddle everyday.
- Routines (attention) developed for meals, sleep, activities, etc.
- Reward with praise to build self-esteem and encourage positive behavior.
- Relationship nurtured as a strong foundation for your child’s development.
Parents can incorporate these practices into their daily lives.
They can also come up with activities that strengthen each skill that contribute to school readiness and later success.
"Developing kings and queens one child at a time."
1650 Medical Lane suite 1
Fort Myers FL 33907
Phone: 239-259-5159
Web: www.royalcrownacademy.com
Email: royalcrownacademyvpk@gmail.com