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Here is how 100 kindergarteners live and enter school

By GINNIE GRAHAM News Columnist on Aug 29, 2013, at 10:01 AM  Updated on 8/29 at 10:01 AM



GINNIE GRAHAM

Y'all should see how many others speak like you

No shocker that I have nothing in common with the way people in Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island speak.

My ...

Here are some ways an immigration program has helped kids

It’s been more than a year since I wrote about an immigration program that gives temporary deportation relief to undocumented ...

Why a selfie sexy pose shouldn't make monsters of out boys

After reading the now much-talked about open letter criticizing girls from Texas-based mommy blogger Kim Hall, it made ...

CONTACT THE BLOGGER

Ginnie Graham

918-581-8376
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In a class of 100 kindergarteners, nearly all always smile or laugh, 76 live with two parents, 48 are read to everyday by a family member, 45 receive public health care and 27 are overweight.

One will have been a victim of abuse or neglect within the past year.

Child Trends, a Maryland-based nonprofit research group, used the latest available data to compile the experiences of children entering kindergarten this year.

The statistics used are nationally representative of 5- and 6-year-olds, according to senior researcher David Murphey and research assistant Mae Cooper.

About 4 million children will be in kindergarten this year.

“The data don’t tell us all we’d like to know, by any means; but, they paint a revealing portrait,” according to the researchers.

“And, of course, any real community’s kindergarten class will vary — perhaps greatly — from this ‘average” class.’”

The compilation is compelling because it speaks to what teachers face in their classrooms.

Teachers have no control on how children are prepared for formal schooling or what happens once they leave the building.

As lawmakers rightly want to hold educators accountable for results, an understanding of how children live outside the schools needs to be considered.

“We know that learning begins long before children start school,” the researchers said.

“The kindergartners who will gain the most from their school experience are those whose families and communities have given them a good foundation — proper health, social skills, emotional security, facility with language, a zest for discovering new things.”

The full report offers this summary of 100 children entering kindergarten:

• 98 “usually” or “always” smile or laugh a lot.

• 94 “usually” or “always” show interest and curiosity in learning new things.

• 93 “usually” or “always” are tender and affectionate with a parent.

• 89 are attending public schools; 11 are in private schools.

• 87 are between five and six years old; nine are older than six; and 4 are younger than five.

• 85 have parents who say their neighborhoods are “usually” or “always” safe. Ten years ago, there would have been 82.

• 84 use English as their primary language at home.

• 81 have one or both parents working full-time.

• 78 “usually” or “always” bounce back quickly when things don’t go their way.

• 76 live in a two-parent household; 21 live with their mothers only; two live with their fathers only.

• 75 received at least some breastfeeding as infants.

• 58 saw a dentist in the past year. Ten years ago, there would have been 42.

• 55 had some experience with center-based care as their primary arrangement before kindergarten; 21 stayed home with a parent; 15 were in home-based care with a relative; 6 were in home-based care with a non-relative.

• 54 ate meals together with all family members everyday during the past week. Ten years ago, there would have been 53.

• 52 are non-Hispanic white, 23 are Hispanic, 16 are black, five are Asian/Pacific Islander, one is American Indian/Alaska Native, and two are of multiple races. Ten years ago, there would have been 61 non-Hispanic white children, 16 Hispanic children, 17 black children, four Asian/Pacific Islander children, and one American Indian/Alaska Native.

• 49 spend one or more hours on an average weekday watching television programs or videos, or playing video games.

• 48 were read to by a family member everyday during the past week. Ten years ago, there would have been 45.

• 45 are covered by some type of public-assisted health insurance.

• 32 have one or more parents whose education extends to some college or post-secondary vocational training; 20 have parents with a bachelor’s degree; 20 have a parent whose highest level of education is high school; 18 have a parent with some graduate (post-college) education; and nine have a parent who did not finish high school.

• 27 are overweight or obese. Ten years ago, there would have been 23.

• 27 are in families receiving food stamps. Ten years ago, there would have been 12. (Note: The increase is the result of expanded eligibility in 2008, and economic conditions.)

• 25 live in families with incomes below the poverty level, and an additional 22 are from “low-income” families.

• 24 are immigrants or children of immigrants. Ten years ago, there would have been 23.

• 12 have at least one limitation/disability. Ten years ago, there would have been 9.

• 11 have asthma. Ten years ago, there would have been 10.

• 10 don’t use any safety restraints (seat belt, car seat) when riding in a car.

• 9 have a special health care need, according to parents.

• 8 were low birthweight babies (less than five and a half pounds at birth), a risk to optimal development.

• 1 was the victim of substantiated abuse or neglect in the past year.


Follow Ginnie Graham on Twitter.

YOUR IN-DEPTH LOCAL NEWS SOURCE: Visit tulsaworld.com throughout the day for local breaking news and investigative reports about Tulsa and northeastern Oklahoma.
GINNIE GRAHAM

Y'all should see how many others speak like you

No shocker that I have nothing in common with the way people in Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island speak.

My ...

Here are some ways an immigration program has helped kids

It’s been more than a year since I wrote about an immigration program that gives temporary deportation relief to undocumented ...

Why a selfie sexy pose shouldn't make monsters of out boys

After reading the now much-talked about open letter criticizing girls from Texas-based mommy blogger Kim Hall, it made ...

CONTACT THE BLOGGER

Ginnie Graham

918-581-8376
Email

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NEWS FEED

Divorces ASKED

21 hours ago

Marriages (Tulsans unless indicated)

21 hours ago

Gunman in Navy Yard rampage was hearing voices He had been treated since August by Veterans Affairs, the officials said.

13 hours ago

191 Comments

Putin and Obama

2 days ago

166 Comments

Obama's Jail

5 days ago

116 Comments

United We Stand

6 days ago

88 Comments

Obama Foreign Policy

4 days ago