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09/29/2011

Delaying Kindergarten

To reach real peace in the world, we will have to begin with the children.
Gandhi

Parents of kindergarten-age children often delay school entry in an attempt to give them a leg up on peers.  But, according to Sam Wang and Sandra Aamodt, writing in the New York Times (September 24, 2011) this strategy is likely to be counterproductive.  Wang and Aamodt observed...

"Teachers may encourage redshirting (delaying kindergarten entry) because more mature children are easier to handle in the classroom and initially produce better test scores than their younger classmates.  In a class of 25, the average difference is equivalent to going from 13th place to 11th.  This advantage fades by the end of elementary school, though, and disadvantages start to accumulate.  In high school, redshirted children are less motivated and perform less well.  By adulthood, they are no better off in wages or educational attainment — in fact, their lifetime earnings are reduced by one year.

"...Parents who want to give their young children an academic advantage have a powerful tool: school itself.  In a large-scale study at 26 Canadian elementary schools, first graders who were young for their year made considerably more progress in reading and math than kindergartners who were old for their year (but just two months younger)....  Learning is maximized not by getting all the answers right, but by making errors and correcting them quickly.  In this respect, children benefit from being close to the limits of their ability.  Too low an error rate becomes boring, while too high an error rate is unrewarding.  A delay in school entry may therefore still be justified if children are very far behind their peers, leaving a gap too broad for school to allow effective learning.

"Parents want to provide the best environment for their child, but delaying school is rarely the right approach.  The first six years of life are a time of tremendous growth and change in the developing brain.  Synapses, the connections between brain cells, are undergoing major reorganization.  Indeed, a 4-year-old’s brain uses more energy than it ever will again.  Brain development cannot be put on pause, so the critical question is how to provide the best possible context to support it."







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