Monday, November 28, 2016

The Importance of Kindergarten



A recent report in the Fall/ Winter 2016 issue of the Johns Hopkins Health Review (pp.42-43) focused on the critical importance of success in kindergarten. Professor Deborah Gross and her team from the Johns Hopkins School of Nursing completed a study of children entering kindergarten in Baltimore City Public Schools. The research concluded that children who enter kindergarten who were behind in social- behavioral development were “ more likely to be held back, suspended or expelled in the future.” Dr. Gross’ researchers followed 9000 students in Baltimore elementary schools and highlighted the importance of students being socially and behaviorally ready for school. One of the other researchers observed that this seems to be a larger issue for boys and that poverty or some traumatic event could effect a student’s ability to “ manage emotions, focus attention, and process information.”

What is the takeaway from this study?  For one thing parents need to be educated and coached in an effort to get their children ready for school, and all that goes with being a successful student. The other obvious conclusion has to do with pre-school. Universal pre- school should be available to all children with a program in both academic and social skills to enable students to be ready for kindergarten and to be successful when they get there.


c.2016  J. Margolis

Sunday, November 20, 2016

A Crossroads in American Education



Full disclosure. I am the product of a public magnet high school in Philadelphia. The School District of Philadelphia was way ahead of the curve in the 50s and 60s with a myriad of choices for students who were interested in music, science, college preparation, and, later, the fine and performing arts.

What about charter schools? Much has been said and written about the success of public charter schools in the United States, especially in inner city areas. A number of schools have demonstrated significant achievement and the areas of reading and math. These are schools that are funded with public money and organized by concerned parents in a community. Some are run by private organizations and there has been significant resistance to such programs by teachers unions.

Another education issue has to do with school choice. Can parents choose to send their children to schools out of their district ? Can public money be used to pay tuition for a student to attend a parochial or private school? A number of cases relating to these issues have ended up in court. Parenthetically, in a number of small and rural school districts in Vermont, the town pays tuition for students to attend the local private school because it is far more expedient and less expensive than to build and staff a school(s).

All of this leads us to the recent Presidential election. We really don’t know which direction the new President will choose to take. What we do know is that President- elect Trump did not send his children to public schools. Keep an eye on who gets nominated to be the new Secretary of Education and what his or her philosophy is. That may give us some insight as to what direction the new administration wishes to take. Keep this fact in mind. There is nothing written in the Constitution of the United States regarding the education of America’s children. Thus according to Article Ten, those decisions are to be left up to the states.


c.2016 J. Margolis

Saturday, November 5, 2016

Get out the Electoral Map- Don’t Boo - VOTE




Red State. Blue State. Battleground State. It can all be very confusing, especially for school students. Every time a Presidential election rolls around, I remember my seventh grade social studies teacher in Philadelphia, who on Election Day, gave each of us an outline map of the United Stated an told us to color in each state’s winner as the ballots were cast. The year was 1960 and the election was between John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon. It turned out to be a very close election that was not finally decided until the next day. When my mom told me to go to bed on election, the outcome was not yet decided. It was all very exciting. I learned quite a lot about the electoral process. It was a teachable moment in civics then and it is now.
Distribute those outline maps and have your students engage in the election process. You don’t have to discuss who to vote for or the qualities of the candidates.
It’s not too early introduce your students to the process of electing a president and to develop the good habit of being a responsible citizen and vote.



C.2016  J. Margolis