230 likes | 362 Views
Children Entering School Ready to Learn The 2011-2012 Maryland School Readiness Report. Montgomery County. what the 2009-2010 school readiness data mean for Maryland ’ s children. Birth to Five a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. The Greatest Chance for Learning
E N D
Children Entering School Ready to Learn The 2011-2012 Maryland School Readiness Report Montgomery County what the 2009-2010 school readiness data mean for Maryland’s children
Birth to Fivea once-in-a-lifetime opportunity • The Greatest Chance for Learning • 90% of brain development occurs before age 5 • The brain depends on early experiences to grow • Early learning experiences build school readiness • School Readiness • A child’s ability to successful carry out kindergarten work
How does Maryland Assess Readiness?About the MMSR • Maryland Model for School Readiness (MMSR) • An annual assessment on what each kindergartener knows and is able to do in the following domains: • Language & Literacy • Mathematical Thinking • Physical Development • Scientific Thinking • Social & Personal Development • Social Studies • The Arts
How does Maryland Assess Readiness?About the MMSR • Maryland Model for School Readiness (MMSR) • Children are identified as: • Fully Ready: Consistently demonstrates the skills, behaviors, and abilities, which are needed to meet kindergarten expectations successfully. • Approaching Readiness: Inconsistently demonstrates the skills, behaviors, and abilities, which are needed to meet kindergarten expectations successfully and requires targeted instructional support in specific areas. • Developing Readiness: Does not demonstrate the skills, behaviors, and abilities, which are needed to meet kindergarten expectations and requires considerable instructional support in specific areas.
Statewide HighlightsMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • Key Trends in Maryland • Strong short-term gains. Stunning long-term improvements. • 83% of Maryland kindergarteners are fully school-ready, up 34-points from 2001-2002 and 2 points more than last year. • Statewide full readiness level higher than projections in the Race to the Top Early Learning Challenge grant. • Maryland experienced pronounced gains across all Domains of Learning. • Focus on Language & Literacy is paying off. • All children show higher achievement. • African-American and Hispanic kindergarteners made substantial gains – higher than statewide overall gains. • Children attending a PreK program the year prior to matriculating to kindergarten are highly prepared.
Significant School Readiness GainsMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • 81% of the County’s kindergarten students are fully ready for school – a 20-point gain in readiness from 2001-2002. • Montgomery County’s kindergarteners are within 2 points of the statewide readiness level, currently at 83%. Source: Maryland State Department of Education
Stunning ImprovementsMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • 81% of the County’s kindergarten students are fully ready for school, up from 61% in 2001-2002 and 74% last year. • Only 3% of the County’s children are developing readiness – fewer than 310 students require considerable support to do kindergarten work. Source: Maryland State Department of Education
Increased Readiness Across All DomainsMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • Kindergarteners show the greatest gains (up 31 points from 2001-2002) in: • Social Studies (68% fully ready) • Scientific Thinking (63%) • Kindergarteners demonstrate the strongest readiness in: • Physical Development (89% fully ready) Source: Maryland State Department of Education
Investments in Language & Literacy Pay OffMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • There is a direct correlation between increases in Language & Literacy skills and improvements in overall school readiness. • 72% of kindergarteners are fully ready in the area of Language & Literacy, a 25-point gain since 2001-2002. Source: Maryland State Department of Education
Big Gains for “STEM” DisciplinesMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • The domains aligned with the “STEM Disciplines”– Science Technology Engineering and Math – saw gains higher than the countywide average (20 points): • Mathematical Thinking (76% fully ready, a 23-point gain) • Scientific Thinking (63% fully ready, a 31-point jump) • Despite the gains, over 4,000 kindergarteners (37%) require targeted or considerable support to successfully complete work in Science – the domain with the least readiness. Source: Maryland State Department of Education
All Children Show Higher AchievementMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • 77% of African-American children are fully school-ready, up 23 points from 2001-2002. • 71% of Hispanic children are fully school-ready – a 25-point jump from 2001-2002. • These gains are substantially higher than the overall countywide gains (20-point increase from 2001-2002). • Not Tracked in 2001-2002 * Fewer than 5 Students Source: Maryland State Department of Education
Good Progress Among Males & FemalesMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • 85% of females are fully school-ready in 2011-2012, up from 67% in 2001-2002. • While a smaller percentage of males (77%) are fully ready in 2011-2012, they are within 4 points of the County average. Source: Maryland State Department of Education
Increases Among Low-Income ChildrenMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • 71% kindergarteners from low-income households (Free and Reduced Priced Meal status) rose to full readiness, up from 46% in 2001-2002. • These gains bring children from low-income households within 10 points of the countywide average. • 38% of the County’s kindergarteners are from low-income households. Source: Maryland State Department of Education
Substantial Progress Among ELLMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • 71% of English Language Learners (ELL – children whose first language is not English) are fully ready, up from 51% in 2001-2002. • These gains bring ELL within 10 points of the countywide average. • 35% of the County’s kindergarteners are ELL. Source: Maryland State Department of Education
Good Gains Among Children with DisabilitiesMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • 52% of children with disabilities are fully ready, a 28-point gain from 2001-2002 and 5 points more than last year. • These gains bring children with disabilities within 29 points of the countywide average. • 8% of the County’s kindergarteners have an identified disability or receive services through an Individualized Education Plan (IEP). Source: Maryland State Department of Education
Readiness Disparities for At-Risk ChildrenMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 Children from Low-Income Households • 71% of Montgomery County’s kindergarteners from low-income households are fully ready in 2011-2012, compared with 86% of children from mid- to high-income households. • The 25-point gain from 2001-2002 reduced the readiness disparity between children from low-income households and their peers from 18 points to 15 points in 2011-2012. English Language Learners • 71% of Montgomery County’s English Language Learners are fully ready in 2011-2012, compared with 86% of their English-proficient peers. • Despite the substantial gains (20 points), the disparity between English Language Learners and their English-proficient peers widened from 10 points in 2001-2002 to 15 points in 2011-2012. Children with Disabilities • 52% of Montgomery County’s children with disabilities are fully school-ready in 2011-2012, compared with 83% of children without disabilities. • The 28-point gain from 2001-2002 decreased the readiness disparity between children with disabilities and their peers from 37 points to 31 points in 2011-2012.
Prior Care EnrollmentPredominate Care Prior to Kindergarten • 46% of the County’s children who matriculated to kindergarten in 2011-2012 attended a public PreK program. • This year, Montgomery County enrolled 3,627 students in its public PreK program. NOTE: Some prior care settings have enrollment criteria. For example, Head Start Centers and public PreK almost exclusively serve children from low-income households and children with disabilities—two subgroups that have consistently had significantly lower school readiness than Maryland kindergarteners as a whole, and are considered at risk. Source: Maryland State Department of Education
Improvements For All Prior Care SettingsMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • Child Care Centers saw a 17-point increase from 2001-2002 to 85% fully ready in 2011-2012. • Family Child Care observed a 21-point jump to 77% fully ready. • Head Start experienced a 20-point gain to 72% fully ready. • Non-public nursery programs noticed a 16-point rise to 91% fully ready. Source: Maryland State Department of Education
PreK Makes a DifferenceMaryland Model for School Readiness, 2011-2012 • 82% of children previously enrolled in PreKprograms are fully ready, up from 55% in 2001-2002. • Children previously enrolled in PreK exceed the countywide readiness averageand show greater long-term improvements (a 27-point gain, compared with 20 points). • Children with PreK experience outperform their low-income peers (71% fully ready). • Because public PreKprograms serve a high percentage of low income children, this data is significant for addressing the achievement gap. Source: Maryland State Department of Education
Why has Maryland Improved?Long-term Investments Investments • Race to the Top • PreK • Full-day Kindergarten • Accreditation & Credentialing • Judy Center Partnerships • Jurisdictional Actions • Community Commitment • Research & Policy • Monetary Support
Looking AheadWhat does the future hold? Maryland Awarded $50 million Race to the Top - Early Learning Challenge Funds • 24 Local Early Childhood Councils • Tiered Quality Rating and Improvement System: Maryland EXCELS • Quality Capacity Building in support of Maryland EXCELS • Promoting early learning standards, aligned with statewide Common Core Standards, to all early childhood programs • Expanding PD and workforce development • Developing a Comprehensive Assessment System (in collaboration with Ohio) • Innovative early interventions • Family Engagement • Leadership in Early Learning Academies • Linking early childhood data with Maryland’s longitudinal data system
Looking AheadWhat does the future hold? Maryland’s New Benchmarks & Ambitious Goals • 92% of kindergarteners fully school-ready by 2015 • Narrowing of school readiness gaps among at-risk populations Collective Action • Through Maryland & Jurisdictional efforts, we are on track to achieve all Race to the Top Early Learning Challenge Fund goals