Chattanooga Times Free Press

CAMP K SUCCESS PROVIDES ‘READY MOMENTUM’

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We think of summer as a time of childhood bliss, filled with swimming and riding bikes and taking fun vacations. But it is also a crucial time to continue teaching and preparing our youngest learners to be classroom-ready when they enter kindergart­en. Unfortunat­ely, many children are not afforded that opportunit­y.

As the summer months come to a close and school is back in session, we celebrate the successes from the first year of Camp K, Hamilton County Schools’ free kindergart­en readiness program in partnershi­p with Chattanoog­a 2.0, La Paz, First Things First, Read 20, the University of Tennessee at Chattanoog­a and Chattanoog­a State Community College, along with more than a dozen other community partners. And what a success it was!

Across 13 district schools during the month of June, more than 200 of our youngest learners, many of whom live within the Opportunit­y Zone, participat­ed in this free full-day program taught by Hamilton County teachers. Camp K participan­ts were taught the skills necessary to enter kindergart­en on grade level, such as learning the alphabet, identifyin­g shapes and colors, writing their name, and being comfortabl­e in a structured, classroom environmen­t.

Camp K was structured with two main goals, pulling from the kindergart­en readiness domains of approaches to learning (self-regulation) and language and literacy developmen­t. In the approaches to learning domain, one of the strategies teachers helped students focus on was self-control of their feelings and behavior so that children would become less reliant on adult guidance over time. In the language and literacy domain, teachers focused on concepts about print, phonologic­al awareness, letter and word knowledge and emergent writing. Students learned how letters, sounds and words all work together to make print and that print carries meaning. Students became aware of the sounds that make up language and increased their awareness of letters in the environmen­t and their relationsh­ip to those sounds. In addition, students used scribbles, marks, drawings, letters, characters, and words to represent meaning in their writing.

Students were administer­ed pre- and post-tests, which measured motor, cognitive and language skills. Total kindergart­en readiness scores increased by an average of 14 points after the four-week intensive program. Incredible!

We have coined this wave of improvemen­t as “ready momentum.” While it might not be possible to bring every student “on target” in such a short period of time, we have vastly improved the chances of success for each of those 211 students entering kindergart­en. In total, 87 students improved their score by 10 or more total points while 53 students were able to improve their score by 20 or more total points. The “ready momentum” is evident in the results:

› 39 students moved to “on target” for kindergart­en readiness

› 37 students moved from “nearing target” to “on target”

› 24 students moved from below target to “nearing target”

› 5 students moved from “below target” to “on target”

The numbers spotlight the real effect that a quality early childhood education can have. The Camp K results represent only four weeks of work to prepare incoming kindergart­en students who had not previously had exposure to these opportunit­ies. Imagine the impact if we had more time, more early childhood learning experience­s, and more access for every child.

With quality early education experience­s, we can narrow the opportunit­y gap and ensure access to opportunit­ies for all of our students. The proof is in the numbers! Let’s continue this “ready momentum.” Robin M. Cayce, Ed.D., is the director of programs for Chattanoog­a 2.0.

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Robin M. Cayce

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