Home / Kindergarten Readiness – A Hot Topic Every Summer

Kindergarten Readiness – A Hot Topic Every Summer

Trying to prepare your little one for kindergarten in the fall, but wondering if he or she is truly ready? You’re not alone – thousands of parents every year face this tough issue and all the questions it brings. In fact, in an effort to help kindergartners be more prepared for school, more than a dozen states have changed the age criteria for children entering school for the first time. If your youngster is one of the many who could start school either this year or next year, though, sometimes age regulations only add to the parental confusion – to school, or not (yet) to school? “There’s no exact way to tell if a child is ready to start school,” says Cari Diaz, our Club Z! Franchise Director. “A good way to get kids ready for kindergarten is to find a program geared toward doing just that. We see the necessity of this and have created a program to help children get ready for school.” When it comes to kindergarten readiness, programs like Club Z!’s may be just what the teacher ordered. According to the U.S. Department of Education, 94% of kindergarten teachers surveyed believe that a child’s readiness can be enhanced by providing experiences children need to build important skills. Successful school-preparation programs offer things like readiness tutoring, social and emotional development skills, and motor, cognitive and language skill improvement. Engaging young minds: the first step towards school Many experts agree that reading aloud every day, playing counting games, and engaging in creative hands-on activities like working with crayons and clay are some of the best ways to get kids ready for kindergarten. Exposing young children to a variety of learning methods helps to engage them regardless of their learning styles. In addition, when adults are excited and take an active interest in a child’s education, children usually follow in those footsteps. “There are so many things that can help a child get ready for school,” says Ms. Diaz. “Programs like ours offer children the chance to be imaginative and try to inspire them to get them excited about learning. Once they see how fun it is to learn new things each day, they will take an active interest in school. And that’s where success begins.”
Category: Uncategorized

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

RECENT POSTS

No matter how you look at it, college is an expensive proposition these days. Both public and private colleges and universities have had to raise fees and tuition as costs have increased. As a result, college student debt has skyrocketed and many students end up with loan payments years, sometimes even decades, after graduation. But with some careful planning and creative thinking, there are lots of other ways to help pay for college and avoid being stuck with big loan payments after graduation. One final but important step in the college application process is to include an application for financial aid.

As parents, and grandparents for that matter, we consider it to be a bit of a rite of passage to tell our children just how easy they have it compared to what we went through at their age. File this under the “when I was your age, I had to walk 2 miles to school each day, uphill both ways” category.

For any parent of a college-bound student, SAT and ACT test scores are no doubt at the center of most dinner table discussions. While no one will argue that test scores alone are the deciding factor in college admissions, and many colleges are moving toward a test-optional admissions policy, strong scores on the SAT and or ACT can definitely help a student’s chance of gaining admission to his/her college of choice.