The topic of vocabulary development is important enough to add some new and recent links/excerpts:
Recent Trends in Income, Racial, and Ethnic School
Readiness Gaps at Kindergarten Entry
Sean F.
Reardon, Ximena A. Portilla (August 2016 ). Recent Trends in Income, Racial,
and Ethnic School Readiness Gaps at Kindergarten Entry, American
Educational Research Association (AERA) Open, DOI:
10.1177/2332858416657343,
From
Reading Rockets
A short
excerpt:
“This study found that low-income kindergarten
students have reversed the trend of growing academic achievement gaps between
them and their higher-income peers. Academic achievement gaps grew from the
1970s to the 1990s, but from 1998 to 2010 the gaps shrank 10-16%. During this
time frame, the White-Hispanic kindergarten readiness gap and the White-Black
gap each dropped. Researchers attributed the improved preparedness, in part, to
low-income parents spending significantly more time reading to their children,
taking them to museums, and introducing them to educational games on computers.
Despite the narrowing of these readiness gaps, they remain large and, in fact, progress
is so slow that at the rate that improvements are occurring, it will take at
least 60 years for disparities to be eliminated.”
Teaching Vocabulary Early, Direct, and Sequential
By Andrew Biemiller
http://www.aft.org/periodical/american-educator/spring-2001/teaching-vocabulary#sthash.D6BkLdow.dpuf
A short excerpt
“Schools now do little to promote vocabulary development,
particularly in the critical years before grade 3. The role of schooling in
vocabulary acquisition has been the subject of much debate. Early (pre-literacy)
differences in vocabulary growth are associated with social class (Duncan,
Brooks-Gunn, and Klebanov, 1994; Hart and Risley, 1995; McLloyd, 1998). Nagy
and Herman (1987) and Sternberg (1987) argue that much vocabulary acquisition
results from literacy and wide reading rather than from direct instruction.
However, it is obvious that a great deal of vocabulary acquisition occurs
before children become literate, and before they are reading books that
introduce unfamiliar vocabulary (Becker, 1977). Cantalini (1987) and Morrison,
Williams, and Massetti (1998) both report that vocabulary acquisition in
kindergarten and grade 1 is little influenced by school experience, based on
finding that young first-graders have about the same vocabulary (Peabody
Picture Vocabulary Test) as older kindergarten children. Cantalini reported the
same result for second grade. - See more at: http://www.aft.org/periodical/american-educator/spring-2001/teaching-vocabulary#sthash.D6BkLdow.dpuf “
Closing the Vocabulary Gap
Alex Rappaport argues that word acquisition may be the easiest way to close the
achievement gap
A short excerpt:
“One
promise of public education is to level the playing field across the
socioeconomic and ethnic spectrum. Unfortunately, the system is not fulfilling
that promise. The achievement gap has been an issue for decades, and it’s
getting worse."
"A recent study released
by Stanford University sociologist Sean F. Reardon shows that the gap has
widened by 40% since the 1960s. The study looked at the disparity in academic
achievement between students in the tenth percentile of family income against
students in the ninetieth percentile. Standardized test scores were used as a
metric, which is fairly common in achievement gap studies. Other metrics
include high school dropout rates and college graduation rates. Unfortunately,
the relationship between income and achievement is consistent across all of
these metrics. According to Teach for America, only 8% of students growing up
in poverty graduate from college by age 24, compared with 80% of students in
more affluent areas. In other words, the effects of the gap extend beyond test
scores and make a significant impact on achievement throughout a student’s
academic career.”
"Many researchers attribute the lower achievement to “opportunity
gaps” such as a lack of educational resources at home, limited access to
health-care, and even more subtle factors like test bias, stereotyping, and
peer pressure. With so many social and cultural factors at play, the problem
can seem insurmountable. What to fix first? And how? Elimination of poverty or
improvements to the health care system can’t be achieved from within the
classroom walls" ….
Preschool
Through Third Grade Alignment and Differentiated Instruction: A Literature
Review
August 2016
Prepared for: Policy and Program Studies Service Office of Planning, Evaluation
and Policy Development U.S. Department of Education
Prepared by: Katie Drummond Aleksandra Holod
Marie Perrot Antonia Wang American Institutes for Research Washington, DC 20007
A short
excerpt from a 108 page report
“Executive
Summary This literature review provides a review of policies, programs, and
practices that have the potential to help students sustain the positive effects
of preschool as they progress from kindergarten through grade 3 (K–3). The U.S.
Department of Education’s Policy and Program Studies Service commissioned this
systematic literature review, which focuses on two specific approaches: (1)
preschool and K–3 alignment, and (2) differentiated instruction in kindergarten
and first grade. Background Research shows that participation in a high-quality
preschool can improve young children’s readiness skills for elementary school,
positively influencing behavioral, social-emotional, and cognitive outcomes
(Andrews, Jargowsky, & Kuhne, 2012). Specifically, for children who may be
at risk for academic challenges in early elementary school, attending a
high-quality preschool can improve test scores and attendance, and it can
reduce grade-level retention and placement in special education (Andrews et
al., 2012; Barnett, 2008; Karoly & Bigelow, 2005; Reynolds, 1993; Reynolds
et al., 2007). However, some preschool program evaluations document that strong
initial benefits may not persist into early elementary school (Lipsey, Farran,
& Hofer, 2015; Magnuson, Meyers, Ruhm, & Waldfogel, 2005; Manship,
Madsen, Mezzanotte, & Fain, 2013; Ramey et al., 2000; U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services, 2010). Preschool benefits may not persist for many
reasons, including lack of continuous follow-up with participating students,
lack of family supports or involvement, or limited intensity or duration of the
preschool program (Brooks-Gunn, 2003; Halpern, 2013; Reynolds, Magnuson, &
Ou, 2006). The positive effects of preschool may not persist if children attend
poor-quality elementary schools after preschool (Clements, Reynolds, &
Hickey, 2004; Lee & Loeb, 1995). Without additional and continuous supports
as children continue through the early elementary grades, participation in
preschool cannot overcome potential challenges that children, particularly
those at risk for poorer academic outcomes, may face. It is important to
identify ways to sustain early cognitive, social-emotional, and academic gains
in order to give all students opportunities to thrive academically. To explore
potential ways to sustain the positive effects of preschool, this literature
review focused on two specific topics: (1) preschool and K–3 alignment and (2)
differentiated instruction in kindergarten and first grade. The U.S. Department
of Education’s Policy and Program Studies Service (PPSS), in collaboration with
the Office of Early Learning, selected eight topics for preliminary searches
after initial attempts to identify interventions specifically designed to
sustain the benefits of preschool turned up low yields. Based on the search
results (and after receiving input from multiple Department offices), PPSS
recommended two final topics for the literature review. PPSS made final
decisions about further specifications for the differentiated instruction section
(e.g., only include research spanning grades K–1 and exclude studies that focus
exclusively on lower-achieving students)."
Preschool and K–3 Alignment The first topic
focuses on approaches to align preschool and kindergarten through grade 3.
"The first
topic focuses on approaches to align preschool and kindergarten through grade
3. Preschool or prekindergarten and K–3 alignment (sometimes called P–3)
emphasizes coordination among standards, curricula, instructional practices,
student assessment, and teacher professional development between the preschool
years and the early elementary school years. Early childhood experts assert
that the effects of preschool may be sustained and investment in early
education capitalized upon if curricula and instructional strategies from
preschool through grade 3 are well aligned (Bogard & Takanishi, 2005;
Brooks-Gunn, 2003; Howard, 2008). As Reynolds and Temple (2008) suggest, P–3
programs may provide more continuity and better organization of services for
students as well as enhanced school-family partnerships.
Differentiated
Instruction.
The second topic focuses on differentiated
instruction in kindergarten and first grade. The premise of differentiated
instruction is that teaching practices and curricula should vary to meet the
diverse needs and skills of the individual student and to optimize students’
learning experiences (Tomlinson, 2000, 2001). In a differentiated instructional
delivery model, student needs are emphasized (Stanford & Reeves, 2009),
with teachers purposively adapting instructional strategies and the focus of
skill building to be responsive to individual or groups of students (Jones,
Yssel, & Grant, 2012). One explanation for why initial benefits of
preschool do not persist as students enter elementary school is that children
who make early gains in preschool may not have the opportunity to maintain
their growth rate or learning trajectory because early elementary instruction
may focus on students who are less prepared and have low-level skills. In other
words, instruction may not be differentiated, and in some cases may not be
rigorous enough, to meet and build upon the skills that some students have upon
school entry (Claessens, Engel, & Curran, 2013; Kauerz, 2006; Lipsey,
Farran, & Hofer, 2015)."
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