Home

John's Q&As

State Superintendent Jack O’Connell looks back – and ahead
 
 

Recent Videos

State Superinten...
Derek Mitchell, ...
Stephanie Couch ...
Foothill College...
More videos
 
 

LA Unified to pilot 2-year kindergarten

Posted in Preschool, kindergarten

In most states, children must turn five by June 1 or Sept. 1 to enter kindergarten in the fall. To its disadvantage – and against the advice of many educators – California has a late starting date of Dec. 1, with kids as young as four years and nine months starting kindergarten.

Recognizing that many children that young are not developmentally and emotionally ready for elementary school, Los Angeles Unified will start a two-year kindergarten next fall on a limited basis. There will be one program in each of the district’s eight districts.

(Read more and comment on this post)

Comments on LA Unified to pilot 2-year kindergarten

I have recently met with and submitted research and reasons to make this very addendum to the ed. code. ...
- Jennifer Bullard
Locally OGSD has been experimenting with this for the last couple of years.
- Paul Muench
 
Return to Home page
 

Get updates of The Educated Guess

Enter your email address:

 

About The Educated Guess

The Educated Guess is a forum on education policies in California and Silicon Valley. It is funded by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and sponsored by the Silicon Valley E
Read more
 

About John

John Fensterwald is a journalist at the Silicon Valley Education Foundation,
which he joined in September 2009. For 11 years before that, he wrote editorials at the Mercury News in San Jose, with a focus on education.
Read more
 

Recent Posts

 

Archives

 

Categories

 

Other Links

  • Bridging Differences Diane Ravitch and Deborah Meyer, opposites on some issue, share an insightful dialogue.
  • California Progress Report Check out author and retired newspaper editor Peter Schrag’s column every Monday.
  • California Teachers Association The teachers union’s perspective on ed reform and issues affecting teachers
  • EdSource Prime site for facts and research on education in California.
  • Education Next Online journal and blogs sponsored by Hoover Institution’s Koret Task Force on K-12 Education
  • Edutopia “What works in public education. Funded by The George Lucas Educational Foundation
  • Eduwonk Blog by Andrew Rotherham, co-founder and Publisher of Education Sector, keeps sharp eye on national scene.
  • EdVoice Small advocacy group that’s a power behind the scenes in Sacramento.
  • Enterprise Blog Andrew Smarick keeps a close eye on federal spending. He writes for the conservative American Enterprise Institute.
  • Getting Down To Facts studies 20 studies on school governance and finance; published in 2007. Encyclopedic and relevant.
  • Governor’s Committee on Education Excellence 2007 report with recommendations the governor shouldn’t have ignored.
  • Joanne Jacobs Former colleage at the Mercury News challenges assumptions with incisive writing.
  • Learning Matters John Merrow, PBS’ education correspondent
  • The College Puzzle Stanford Professor Emeritus of Education and Business Administration Michael Kirst explores policy issues relating to the preparation for and success in college.