Kindergarten classes just got a little longer
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Marisa O’Neil
Kindergarteners at most district schools will spend more time on
campus this coming school year.
Newport Mesa Unified School District is giving each school the
option of going to full-day or extended-day kindergarten. Some sites,
like Newport Coast and Whittier elementary schools, have already
adopted the longer day, but parents at other schools are split over
the prospect.
“Some parents really don’t like the idea,” said Kendall Kunert,
PTA president at California Elementary, where kindergarten will be a
full day this fall. “They think it’s too long a day. They’d rather
have them come home and take a nap.
“Then there’s another faction that would like to see whole day and
who think [students are] ready for it if they get sufficient play
time and nap time.”
The district’s newest elementary school, Newport Coast, has had a
full-day configuration since it opened in 2001. Next year, the
students will have class from 8:35 a.m. to 2:05 p.m., Principal
Monique Van Zeebroeck said. The rest of the students go till 3:10
p.m.
Van Zeebroeck made the decision to start with the longer
kindergarten day because the facility had space for the classes, and
many students in the affluent community were coming to the school
with preschool experience and were “ready to learn,” she said.
Teachers usually do the academic portion in the morning, when the
students have the most energy, and do other activities in the
afternoon. In between, the children get quiet time they can use to
take a nap.
“One thing we learned is to have some breathing time,” she said.
“It can be very taxing, especially at the beginning of the year,
whether it’s a short day or a long day. They can get sensory overload
from learning so many things.”
Adams Elementary School in Costa Mesa needs a full-day program for
the opposite reasons Newport Coast does, PTA president Vicki Snell
said. Adams school is extending its kindergarten hours slightly, but
not going to a full day.
“I think it would be excellent,” Snell said. “Our population needs
a full-day kindergarten more than most. A lot of our students come in
and don’t speak English. They need full-day kindergarten to get
through the curriculum.”
But Eastbluff Elementary School parent Lauren Mulvaney has “no
desire whatsoever” to go to a full day when her twins start
kindergarten. She prefers the attention students get in the “Early
Bird/Late Owl” configuration at the school.
That structure splits each 20-student class into half, with some
overlap in the middle of the day. That means the students get a large
portion of the day with a 10-students-to-one-teacher ratio.
Lincoln Elementary School’s retiring principal and former
kindergarten teacher Barbara Rothman said that her school is sticking
with its Early Bird/Late Owl schedule.
“They can only absorb so much each day,” Rothman said. “The
teachers do a great job of using that instructional time very
efficiently during Early Birds and Late Owl. They need that other
block of time to learn how to get along in this world, which is so
fast-paced, and [to] make friends.”
The district is still compiling information about which schools
will go to extended or full-day kindergarten classes. Under a labor
agreement with teachers, schools may offer instructional minutes for
kindergarteners between the state minimum of 200 and a maximum of 280
minutes.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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