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Adrian Gaty's avatar

“ Everyone wants to blame social media; nobody wants to blame schools.”

I want to blame schools! : )

Thank you and bless you for highlighting this, so important.

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Michelle Miller's avatar

"Seasoned" EC teacher here. As I was setting up my preschool room for the school year (I teach in the vanishing world of two day a week programs), I had the fortune of engaging a young helper, a fellow teacher's daughter who was going to be entering first grade. As she "child tested" all my educational play centers to assure they were engaging, she shared her excitement and ideas about what her school year was going to be like, what subjects she looked forward to, which students she was and was not looking forward to seeing and why, and other random insights into a young child entering public school 1st grade. It was delightful; she was 90% excited and 10% timid. She was grounded. Our little preschool had done a good job of helping her parents instill a love of learning. Off she went.

She returned at the end of the year to help me pack away the treasures in my room, the same ones she helped me curate into the space a few months earlier. She told me of her year, who had been nice to her and a few instances of typical bullies she decided to ignore, the type of books that she was liking and the author series she was going to persue over the break. She shared what lunch was like, how she LOVED recess (yes, our system still has it!) and generally her happiness over conquering her first year in the "big school". It made my heart happy. I'd say she was 100% confident she'd had a very good year.

I asked her what she was going to do over the Summer aside from the books she was going to read. Lots of water and sand activities were on the horizon. I asked her about next year; did she have a teacher she wanted? What was she most excited about doing in second grade? "A real art class" she said. That made me smile. Way to go local public school! Such a delightful little girl she is. She showed none of that 10% timidness from the beginning of the year. No, she is the expert now. She's got this.

As she started to skip off to her mom's room, she turned, head lowered with a furrowed brow and frowning lips. In a stilted and grave voice she looked me square and said, "I just don't want to go to THIRD grade!". Stunned at the change in her demeanor and tone, I asked why. "Because we have to do STAR testing." It's the Texas standard testing in public schools. My heart sank. I cried a bit as I realized that a trepidation of the "test" had flipped her confidence to 10% and her fear to 90% when speaking of THIRD grade year. Her mom will do her absolute best to help her daughter keep the testing in perspective. I'm sure of it. But what of the children who don't have a parent like my coworker? And will my friend's efforts be enough to guard her child from the negative impact that the immense stress FOCUSING on the test causes? The test is NOT in her next year of school but the following! Why the foreboding dread? Already?

I'm 64. In a training with Bev Boss on the importance of play in early childhood (shortly before she died), as we ate lunch she shared her "greatest concern". It was 'who was going to stand up for the children's right to their childhood' after she could no longer do it. Her words stuck in my brain. I had no idea she'd be gone so soon. I've carried her torch in my little neck of the woods ever since. But now I wonder the same thing.

What are we allowing our children to go through? It's madness.

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