Examining How Stakeholders at the Local, State, and National Levels Made Sense of the Changed Kindergarten

2018 ◽  
Vol 56 (3) ◽  
pp. 822-867 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher P. Brown ◽  
Joanna Englehardt ◽  
David P. Barry ◽  
Da Hei Ku

Kindergarten in the United States has fundamentally changed. It is the new first grade where children are taught increased academic content and experience more standardized testing. There is much debate among education stakeholders about these changes, but such discussions are often siloed— making it difficult to know whether these changes reflect these stakeholders’ understandings of kindergarten specifically or public education in general. This explorative video-cued multivocal ethnographic study addressed this issue by examining how local, state, and national education stakeholders made sense of the changed kindergarten. Such findings provide insight into what it is they viewed driving these academic and instructional changes, what opportunities for further reform exist, and whether these stakeholders will work to support and/or alter such changes.

Author(s):  
Nancy Beadie

The three major countries of North America present three different models of system development in education. As compared with Mexico, with its strong central authority, the systems of the United States and Canada are federated rather than national, with virtually all matters of funding, curriculum, licensing, and accreditation administered at provincial rather than national levels. These differences pose a problem of historical explanation. All three countries exhibited similar levels of rhetorical commitment to the idea of publicly supported systems of mass education in the 1820s. During the mid-nineteenth century, all three also adopted basic legal and administrative infrastructures for public education at provincial levels. After 1870, however, the three countries developed different patterns of national education policymaking. Based on a synthesis of focused national studies and comparative and transnational scholarship, this chapter advances an argument about how the divergences among the three systems developed and what factors help explain those differences.


2021 ◽  
Vol 123 (6) ◽  
pp. 1-28
Author(s):  
Christopher P. Brown ◽  
David P. Barry

Background/Context Over the last two decades, policymakers’ standards-based accountability reforms in the United States have fundamentally changed public schooling in general and kindergarten specifically. As this has occurred, little has been learned about how the children themselves make sense of these changes in schooling. Purpose/Objective/Research Question/Focus of Study The purpose of this article is to address this issue by providing insight into how a sample of kindergarteners enrolled in a public kindergarten in Texas made sense of their experiences in kindergarten today in relation to two research questions: a) How did they make sense of their educational experiences in kindergarten?, and b) How would they like to alter kindergarten so that it reflects their understanding of schooling? Research Design This is an explorative qualitative, video-cued, multivocal ethnographic research study. Data were generated through focus-group interviews with 19 kindergarteners in Texas. The students were asked about how they made sense of the changed kindergarten through viewing a micro-level example of their kindergarten classroom in Texas. The video the kindergarteners watched and commented on provides a coherent narrative that captured shortened versions of each of the activities they participate in over a typical day in their classroom. Findings/Results The findings shared in this article illuminate these kindergarteners’ understandings of kindergarten as well as whether or not they believed they would be able to succeed in a school system that expects them to learn more academic content and demonstrate their knowledge on an increasing number of standardized tests. These findings also provide insight into the changes these kindergarteners would like to see made to kindergarten to improve their learning experiences in school. Conclusions/Recommendations The kindergarteners in this study framed kindergarten as a place they go to learn academic content that they believe will allow them to progress to and through subsequent grade levels. Though they enjoyed kindergarten and had strong relationships with their teacher, they would like more opportunities for physical activity and choice throughout the day, which echo the sentiments of other early childhood education stakeholders and researchers. As these were kindergarteners enrolled in a typical public kindergarten, additional insight into these issues could be gained by seeking out the voices of children in different kindergarten programs (e.g., private, play-based, half-day, etc.) or from these same children at different points in their educational careers.


2011 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Parman

Educational institutions and intergenerational mobility are closely related; access to schools is a major determinant of a child's future success. This article offers new insight into this relationship with a study of mobility at the beginning of the United States' expansion of public schools in the early twentieth century. A new intergenerational data set is used to establish high rates of income mobility at the start of the century and a negative relationship between school quality and mobility. Educational attainment estimates reveal that this was a product of high-income families being more responsive to improving schools than poor families.


1996 ◽  
Vol 15 (3) ◽  
pp. 34-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Beverley Argus-Calvo ◽  
Robert Ortiz ◽  
Laurie L. Mccarty

The provision of appropriate special education services to Mexican, immigrant children and their families who live in rural border areas of the United States begins with an understanding of the educational system in Mexico. A brief history and overview of the types of special education programs that are currently being administered in Mexico are provided. Additionally, the personal perspectives of two administrators who oversee programs in rural areas neighboring Ciudad Juarez are highlighted. Using in-depth interviewing to gain insight into the personal and professional experiences of these two professionals, emergent themes concerning special education in rural areas of Mexico are identified and discussed.


Author(s):  
Mtra. María De la Riva ◽  
Dra. Antonia Candela Martín

Este artículo es un estudio etnográfico que tiene como propósito analizar a qué cambios se enfrentan los alumnos y cómo perciben las diferencias en el manejo del tiempo entre las clases de ciencias de un grupo de sexto de primaria y las clases de Introducción a la Física y a la Química y de Biología de primero de secundaria. Durante las clases de secundaria los maestros establecen secuencias de contenidos, tareas y formas de participación distintas de las de primaria. Estas secuencias están ubicadas en espacios y tiempos determinados que producen modificaciones en las formas de participación corporal, representacional y verbal de los alumnos. La capacidad de moverse en el tiempo y el espacio de una cierta estructura escolar es una de las manifestaciones del aprendizaje de los alumnos y de las condiciones para que ellos puedan concentrarse en la apropiación del contenido académico, y por ello es relevante su estudio.AbstractThis article is an ethnographic study that aims to analyse what changes students face and how they perceive the differences intimem management between the science classes of a sixth grade primary school groupand the classes of Introduction to Physics, Chemistry and Biology of a first grade of secondary school. During the secondary school classes, teachers establish sequences of contents, tasks, and forms of participation different from those of primary. These sequences are located in space and certain times that produce modifications in the forms of corporal, representational, and verbal participation of the students. The abilityto move in time and space of a certain school structure is one of the manifestations of student learning (Nespor, 1994) and the conditions for them to focus the appropriation of the academic content, and is therefore relevant study.Recibido: 30 de octubre de 2009 Aceptado: 21 de febrero de 2010


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