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Conference moira::parenting

Title:Parenting
Notice:Previous PARENTING version at MOIRA::PARENTING_V3
Moderator:GEMEVN::FAIMANY
Created:Thu Apr 09 1992
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1292
Total number of notes:34837

898.0. "Multi-age/Non-graded classrooms" by VIVE::STOLICNY () Wed Feb 08 1995 08:27

    
    The town that I live in (Shrewsbury, MA) is piloting a 
    multi-age/non-graded classroom program for K-1st grade 
    beginning in Sept. 95.   The gist of the program is that
    children ages 5-7 will be taught in the same classroom
    together "on their own timeline"; picture many different
    activities going on at the same time.  I'm told this is
    not all that different from "normal" grade school teaching
    these days but do not have any recent experience.   
    
    One of the real benefits of the program would appear to
    be that the child gets to stay with the same teacher 
    for 2 years thereby eliminating the time it takes for
    a new teacher to get to know the child in their second
    school year (good learning can begin from day 1).  
    
    It was mentioned that there are some other towns that
    have programs such as this (I believe the prinicipal
    mentioned Douglas and Hopedale).   The faculty/staff
    were not able to give any negatives/drawbacks of the
    program.   
    
    This particular program is an option and enrollment will
    be by lottery.  
    
    Anyone have any experiences with multi-age classrooms 
    that they'd like to share?
    
    
    Thanks,
    Carol   
T.RTitleUserPersonal
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898.1my initial knee-jerkUSCTR1::WOOLNERYour dinner is in the supermarketWed Feb 08 1995 12:0434
I won't go out of my way to think up positives, since you've 
listed some (and I'm a negative kind of person anyway >:-} )...

Positive:  + Probably a full-day program (til 3:00 anyway).  I've 
             spat tacks in here before on the ludicrous (IMO) 
             policy of having the kindergarten half-days swap 
             sessions halfway through the year.

Negative:  - It's probably at Beal.  I find it a depressing 
             building, the "mad aunt in the attic" among 
             Shrewsbury elementary schools; it's old and rundown, 
             but instead of fixing it, Shrewsbury seems to have 
             made it the site of the alternative programs du 
             jour.

	   - Same teacher for 2 years *could* be negative if 
             child has a personality conflict with that teacher.

	   - Child will be entering 2nd grade as a "new kid": few 
             or no friends, not familiar with the school (I don't 
             think Beal goes beyond 1st grade now, so kids would 
             depart for Spring St., Paton or Coolidge).

	   - Lots of stuff going on in the classroom can be 
             chaotic for kids who need structure/have trouble 
             focusing.

	   - Kids will need to pass muster in traditional areas 
             anyway before entering Grade 2, so:
	     . Who's kidding who, "non-graded"??!
	     . Frantic push in weak areas at the end of 
               "non-graded" stint
	     
Leslie
898.2my son's first year experienceUSCTR1::HSCOTTLynn Hanley-ScottWed Feb 08 1995 12:4734
    I live in Holden and we have multi-age grades 1/2 and 3/4. I actively
    pursued having my son put into a multi-age 1/2 since I believe the
    benefits outweigh potential negatives. Holden has had multiage (also
    called split 1/2) for a few years now. They were somewhat vague about
    how children are selected, saying that it varies each year as
    kindergarten and 1/2 teachers try to get a compatible group mapped
    together.
    
    I will forward the basenoter a copy of the Boston Globe article on
    multiage classes that was published in March 1994. It talks about how
    historically split or multiage classes were put in place to avoid
    holding kids back who were not ready. At least in Holden, that is not
    the basis for multiage classes. In our town it is to encourage teaming
    and working within your skills rather than simply age range. 
    
    My son was put in to a multi-age 1/2 and is doing very very well. (He's
    a summer baby and so, will always be one of the youngest in his classes
    since the cutoff here is 8/31 for age 5 entry to school). I'm very
    encouraged that he'll have the same teacher for 2 years and that he
    will have the opportunity to be both the elder and the younger in a
    group. The teaming that is done on a daily basis is incredible - he
    often works with a second grader on reading, writing or projects where
    they share their strengths but also have to work on their weaknesses
    (e.g. spelling or whatever).   They sit at group tables rather than
    desks, and the tables are mixed 1/2. Though they will often go do 1st
    grade projects as a 1st grade group (and likewise for 2nd grade) they
    also do lots of things as a whole.
    
    It is tremendously challenging for a teacher, that's for sure.
    
    Let me know if you want more info.
    Regards
    Lynn
    
898.3Another perspective on mixed classSWAM2::GOLDMAN_MABlondes have more Brains!Wed Feb 08 1995 14:4830
    My son's school here in Orange County (Irvine) Calif. is an
    "experimental" one, where the entire school has been broken into
    multi-age classes for almost three years.  Kindergarten is still on
    it's own, but we have 1/2 (primary core), 3/4 (intermediate core) and
    5/6 (upper core).  We also have open classroom (two rooms, two
    teachers, two student teachers, etc.) arrangements in all grades.  The
    teachers team, in that Joe's teacher (Mrs. McElroy) handles all 
    English for the "youngers" (1st grade) and the teacher in the next room 
    (Mrs. Allen) handles all Math for them, and vice versa (Mrs. M does
    Math for the olders, Mrs. Allen does English for the olders).  My son 
    is exposed to 2-3 different teaching styles at all times, but will 
    keep the two main teachers for the full two years.  With the exception
    of the Math and English curriculum, the kids all team in even
    older/younger mixes for everything.  
    
    Joe is also a summer baby (6/20/88), and one of the youngest kids
    his class.  However, he is really enjoying this arrangement, and I see
    many advantages.  He is learning much in terms of behavior and specific
    skills from the olders in his class (An older "lefty" has been helping
    Joe with proper pencil-hold for good penmanship, since his parents are
    both "righties"!).  
    
    The only issue I have seen is that the expectations for a 1st grader
    seem to a little high in terms of productivity and concentration.  I
    can only assume that this is because of the multi-age environment.  
    It's probably a lucky thing that my son and I both seem to like the
    multi-age class, since we don't get much of a choice without
    transferring to a school out of our neighborhood!  -:)
    
    M. 
898.4Globe article 3/3/94USCTR1::HSCOTTLynn Hanley-ScottWed Feb 08 1995 16:54189
Boston Globe 3/3/94 Child Care Column 
Reprinted without permission

WHY MIXED-AGE GROUPS CAN BE GOOD FOR KIDS
by Barbara Meltz 
Contributing Reporter

Thirty years or so ago, when we were children, some of us were in combined
kindergarten-first grade classrooms, often with unhappy results. Now many
of us have the option to place our children in combined classrooms, and
we're reluctant to do so.

This may be one time to ignore those instincts.

Mixed-age classrooms today are nothing like those of 30 years ago, assures 
early childhood educator Jerlean Daniel, an assistant professor of child
development at the University of Pittsburgh. She was in one of those class-
rooms herself when she was a kid.  "Discombobulated" is the way she describes
it. 

Back then, she explains, ages were combined for practical reasons: There 
weren't enough 7-year-olds for a first grade, or a school couldn't afford
both a kindergarten and a first grade teacher.

Today, when ages are combined, it's hopefully being done for philosophical
reasons. "We have a greater understanding now of how children learn," says
Daniel, who has been working with mixed-age groups for 18 years. They don't
learn on a flat, even plane.

Early childhood educator Lilian Katz says research shows children learn best
through active, not passive, experiences, in situations that are informal
and not didactic.

Good mixed groupings maximize these experiences. "They enable kids to learn
in two directions," explains Katz, because there is a lot of peer tutoring
going on, in which older children help the younger ones.

"When an older child helps a younger one, whether to tie a shoe or sound
out a word, it reinforces what she knows and also boosts self esteem, "
Katz says. Research shows a younger child is more likely to catch on to
something when learning from a slightly older child than from an adult, and
that she sees the older child as a role model.

This process also builds empathy, Katz says, something she believes has
lifelong implications. Katz is president of the National Association for
the Education of Young Children.

There's another benefit from mixed groups that particularly appeals to Katz:
"There's less competition among kids." Children who are the same age in
the same class tend to think they are all supposed to be doing the same
thing, so if one child is reading and another isn't, the one who isn't feels
bad about himself.

In a mixed group, she explains, a younger child accepts that he can't do
the same things an older child can, but he has the expectation of someday
being able to. "That provides modeling and motivation for him and gives the
older child an appreciations of where he himself was not long ago," says
Katz.

At the same time, there's lots of room for a child to move around cog-
nitively and socially. If a 7-year-old is less socially mature, or a 5-year-
old is more academically mature, each child will be challenged at an
appropriate level. "Teachers tend to be less preoccupied with the 'norms'
in a mixed group and more able to make allowances for the zigzag of
development," says Katz.

While mixed groupings are so far mostly being offered as an option in school
systems, the concept is fast approaching trend status, according to the
National Association of State Boards of Education. Kentucky has mandated
it in its primary classrooms, and Oregon and California are considering it.
Many communities in Massachusetts are also experimenting with combining
ages.

Mixing ages is also becoming increasingly popular in day-care and preschool
settings.

Kimberlee Whaley, an assistant professor at Ohio State University and the
nation's leading researcher on infant-toddler mixed groups, is in the
vanguard of the movement. Her infant-toddler lab school mixes 6-week-old
babies with 3-year-olds.

Although her classroom has been very successful, she says teachers in general
are very afraid of this, and so are parents. Teachers worry about the
difficulty of planning a day for both a 1- and 3-year-old; parents worry
about safety.

She tells teachers, "You can plan across age groups...with activities that
are open-ended so kids can participate in whatever way that they can." A
2-year-old, for instance, may enjoy playing with glue to no purpose while a 
4-year-old may actually want to make something using the glue.

She tells parents that safety is not a factor because children consciously,
on their own, slow themselves down around the the babies. If anything, they
become more nurturing - "They want to hold and feed and love the babies,"
she says - and more accepting when a sibling comes along.

But mixing ages at any level takes thoughtful planning. "You can't just
throw ages together and think it'll work," she says.

In her infant-toddler room, she never has more than 10 children at a time,
never more than four babies under 12 months olds. The rest of the ages are
divided so there are always two kids 6 months of each other. She says that's 
because children form their closest friends with an age mate, but learn more
and are able to interact with a wider range of ages. In this age group, there
should always be three teachers, she says.

Daniel's rule of thumb for age distribution is to divide the group into
thirds, whether it's 5-, 6-, and 7-year-olds or infants and toddlers, so
that a third of the group is among the oldest, a third among the youngest,
and a third in the middle. That way, she says, no one age dominates. For
preschoolers, she says there should be one teacher for four children. In
the elementary grades, she says there should be two teachers to 25 children.

In addition to asking about age distribution, here are other questions parents
should ask about a mixed-aged classroom:
	o	How committed is the teacher? Is she doing this because she's
		assigned to it or because she thinks it's a good idea?
	o	What does she know about child development? Understanding
		developmental milestones is the basis for success in any
		mixed-age classroom, according to Daniel. Since most
		primary grade teachers don't get child development as part
		of their formal training, you want to know they have updated
		themselves in some other way. Daniel says to ask specifically
		if a teacher has read "Developmentally Appropriate Practice",
		by Sue Bredekamp (published by the National Association for
		the Education of Young Children). "That would go a long way,"
		she says.
	o	What is the curriculum? If it's the same as for a same-age 
		group, "it will be a mess," warns Katz. Instead, children
		should be separated by cognitive ability for formal learning
		and should be together for such things as music, story time
		and classroom projects, where children work at their level of
		development toward a common goal. In educational jargon, this
		is called project learning.
	o	How are children assessed? How will a teacher know if a child
		is getting lost? Whaley says what you want to hear is that a
		teacher has goals for each child. Hopefully, says Daniel, a 
		teacher will use Portfolio Assessment, where she looks at a 
		child's progress over a period of time, rather than traditional
		grading.
	
There is one other important question on parents' minds: Are there any risks
to mixed-age groupings?

The only one Katz can think of is that a child may not be sufficiently
challenged. "That's why the teacher's training is so critical," she says.
Whaley says the only child she can think of who may not be right for a 
combined classroom is one who is very timid and might be overwhelmed by
it.

Could a younger child feel inappropriate pressure to go beyond her 
developmental level? Yes, says Daniel, if a teacher focuses on specific
academic skills and drills the class on them. Or, says Whaley, if a child
is unable to do what she is being asked and is not allowed to proceed at
her own developmental pace. Again, adequate teacher training prevents
that.

The Montessori education movement has been mixing age groups successfully
since 1958, according to Lilian Mullane of the American Montessori Society
in New York City.

"We haven't found any negatives to doing it," says Mullane. Katz, Whaley and
Daniel echo the thought. 

"As long as it's done well and incorporates all the things we've talked
about, I can't think of any reason a parent wouldn't choose this option,"
says Katz.

[end of article]

/Sidebar to article:
	MIXING THEM UP WITHOUT CONFUSION
	
	o 	If you like the idea of a mixed-age grouping but aren't sure
		your school is going about it in the right way, voice your
		concerns. "If they aren't responsive to you, or there's no
		room for negotiation, then don't do it," says Jerlean Daniel,
		an assistant professor at the University of Pittsburgh.

	o	Most combined classrooms enable a child to stay with the same
		teacher for at least two years. That's usually an advantage,
		unless a child and teacher don't get along.

	o	Another advantage of mixed groups is that they eliminate the
		need for retention, an issue that comes up often in 
		kindergarten and first grade, when children's development
		is so uneven.
					Barbara F. Meltz

898.5good article, thanks!VIVE::STOLICNYThu Feb 09 1995 08:423
    Thanks Lynn!
    
    cj/
898.6Another PerspectiveCSLALL::DKYMALAINENFri Feb 10 1995 11:1534
    I too have had the experience of the multi-age program.  My son attends
    an elementary school in Danvers, which is in its second year of
    multiage.  
    
    The school implemented the program after spending about 4 months doing
    research on multiage.  The first year of the program was a disaster for
    a multitude of reasons like the second-graders that were in a 1/2
    combination felt that they stayed back.  The two teachers that were
    responsible for these classes had been teaching forever, and found the
    program to be diffcult.
    
    My son was in a 4/5 combination, with the older kids outnumbering the
    younger ones.  My son did okay, but he is doing better this year.  As a
    previous noter mentioned, the teacher has a lot with making this
    program a success.
    
    This year the school has gone to both multiage and straight classrooms. 
    The parents elected what they felt was better for their child.  My son
    was put into a straight 5 - he needed the structure and discipline that
    this teacher uses.  Last years class had no structure, and we found out
    later that the teacher allows students to wander the classroom at any
    time.
    
    I do like the idea of students having teachers for two years, because
    of the learning curve that both students and teachers go through.  I
    wish my son could have had this in the primary grades, because he had
    problems and I didn't recognize the problem.
    
    Good luck and enjoy the program, because it does have a lot of
    positives.  The 2/3 combination at this elementary school works
    wonderful and the teachers are absolutely wonderful.  
    
    Donna