Schools push kids too hard, too early
By Pamela Jorrick
August 22, 2006
People who care about young children should be outraged by how much more academic work kindergarteners are supposed to be doing now than was expected of them in the past, including reading and homework. We should be questioning why or if and how this benefits our children.
Some kids have always been ready to read early, but are all children somehow
now developmentally ready a year or two earlier than they were 20 years ago?
The intervention programs label many children as slow, but they would have
been right on schedule a few years ago. These labels will follow them
through school and most kids will learn to live up to their label of being
slow and inadequate. I would think that many of the kids aren't even slow,
but just stuck in a system that is moving way too fast. It's the system of
too high expectations too early that needs intervention, not the children.
What ever happened to childhood and time to play? Of course reading and
literacy are important, but why at 5 years old? What's the rush? Do we need
or even want our youngest children to be able to read all the newspaper and
magazine headlines, many of which are about terrible violence in the world,
or all of the advertising that you cannot avoid if you leave your home? Who
is speaking up for the rights of the children to just be children?
Five-year-olds need to be listening to and enjoying stories from books, not
being forced to do worksheets that only frustrate them.
Many school children I talk to will read only for schoolwork or prizes,
certainly not to gain information for themselves or because they enjoy it.
Many end up hating it. Perhaps no child will be left behind, but many of
them will grow up thinking they are stupid or slow and never learn to read
for pleasure, find enjoyment in education or truly think for themselves. It
doesn't seem like this is a system that is about the children anymore, but
one that is about making money with textbooks, tests and intervention
programs.
Next, will we move the ages of crawling and walking up a few months, and
develop some programs to assist all these children who may have been fine on
the old time line, but are just too slow these days?
I know there are plenty of parents and teachers who agree that this is
ridiculous. I think we all need to stand up and speak out loudly for these
kids. We shouldn't just accept this loss of childhood and force our kids to
grow up sooner than they need to.
Article found at: http://www.redding.com/redd/op_speak_your_piece/article/0,2232,REDD_18100_4934886,00.html