Albuquerque Journal

NM invests in pre-K literacy software

Parents can see how child fares

- BY CEDAR ATTANASIO

SANTA FE, — New Mexico officials are rolling out a new platform that will track progress among preschool children to better prepare them for kindergart­en and make it easier for parents to keep tabs on their progress.

School, state, and legislativ­e officials trained teachers on the program Monday in a Zoom call aired from a Santa Fe hotel, according to a contractor who is providing the software. The tool provides a 15-minute daily curriculum for young children.

After the coronaviru­s pandemic forced schools to turn to remote learning, the state experience­d a 20% decline in prekinderg­arten enrollment and a 12.5% decline in kindergart­en enrollment, according to state Public Education Department statistics cited in a recent report from the Legislatur­e.

To prepare 4-year-olds for kindergart­en, officials who oversee early childhood education and K-12 are partnering up to get the tool into parents’ hands. The initiative will cost around $875,000.

“Parents will also have access to the back-end data, so they can hop in anytime and see how their child is doing,” said Kim Fischer, spokeswoma­n for Waterford.org, the early childhood education nonprofit that secured the contract.

She estimates around 10,000 children will have access to the tool, which will be required for teachers to use in the vast majority of districts this fall. The orientatio­n Monday followed a limited rollout this spring.

The Early Childhood Education and Care Department says it believes that children will also have more access to in-person programmin­g than in 2019 after being at half-capacity last year because of the pandemic.

“ECECD is also expanding our Summer Jump Start program that works with incoming kindergart­eners in public, private, and tribal pre-K programs (previously it was only open to private pre-K programs) focusing on school readiness, early literacy, and social emotional skills. Our summer nutrition program serving children across the state will be operating at full swing as well,” said spokesman Micah McCoy, in an email.

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