“These Kids Syndrome” and PK-3
Senator and Presidential candidate Barack Obama has developed a reputation as an orator, and his rhetoric on education is no exception. Education reformers have seized on his description of what he calls 鈥淭hese Kids Syndrome鈥 and its harmful effect on our schools and students:
Obama uses the “these kids” story to take to task educators, school administrators, and even some parents who blame someone else鈥攑arents, previous teachers, “the system,” even children themselves鈥攆or children鈥檚 learning difficulties. As anyone who鈥檚 worked in school reform knows, this failure to take responsibility for children鈥檚 learning is a real obstacle to improving public education.
But the “these kids” syndrome could also sum up one of the major obstacles to instituting PK-3 reforms. Too often, key stakeholders fail to think in terms of PK-3 because they believe that 鈥渢hese kids鈥 are not their responsibility. Early childhood and pre-k advocates focus primarily on the needs of children and families from before birth through age five. They want to build comprehensive birth through five systems that provide not only quality pre-k, but also parenting education and leave, family economic support, health care, and so forth. Yet their interest abruptly stops once children enter kindergarten. 鈥淭hese kids鈥 they reason, the ones in public schools, are not their responsibility. After all, there鈥檚 an entire K-12 public education system in place to serve 鈥渢hese kids,鈥 and it already has many of the things鈥攗niversal access, public funding, teachers with bachelors (or higher) degrees鈥攁dvocates covet for zero-to-five programs.
By the same token, K-12 school reformers tend to view 鈥渢hese kids,鈥 the ones younger than five who aren鈥檛 in the public school system yet, as someone else鈥檚 business. Pre-k expansion might be nice, they reason, making children better prepared for school, but it鈥檚 an add-on rather than the sort of structural reform needed to improve public education. Some K-12 reformers even view the pre-k movement as a dangerous distraction that focuses attention on factors outside the school system rather on the problems within schools that must be fixed to improve student learning.
By failing to look beyond their narrow spheres, both early childhood advocates and K-12 reformers undermine their own agendas. of pre-k and early learning gains shows that education supports must continue into the elementary grades to have long-term academic impacts鈥攃hildren who go one from quality childcare and pre-k to lousy elementary schools won鈥檛 have the academic results pre-k supporters promise. And pre-k reforms would complement school reformers efforts by narrowing achievement gaps early, when they鈥檙e less entrenched. But, by ignoring early education, school reformers overlook a powerful vehicle for advancing structural reforms at the elementary school level.
Perhaps worst of all, the current divide between birth-through-five 鈥渆arly childhood鈥 programs and K-12 education also exacerbates the larger 鈥渢hese kids syndrome,鈥 allowing both sides to blame the other when child outcomes fall short, rather than accepting shared responsibility for student learning. By building shared accountability鈥攂etween pre-k, K-3, parents, and communities鈥攆or children鈥檚 academic outcomes in third grade and beyond, PK-3 reform offers a way out of the 鈥渢hese kids鈥 trap鈥攂ut only if early childhood educators and K-12 reformers can dispense with outmoded and artificial divisions and start thinking of all kids ages 3 to 8 as “our kids.”