patching...
Welcome back, Patch Blogger!

Newton Parents Speak Up For Full-Day Kindergarten [Poll]

More than a dozen parents spoke up during a public comment period at Monday's School Committee meeting.

 

The first School Committee meeting of the year was jam-packed Monday night with a group of parents who had one thing on their minds: full-day kindergarten. 

More than a dozen local parents stood up during the public comment period of Monday night's meeting to urge the School Committee and superintendent to seriously consider a full-day kindergarten program. 

"When I found out our kindergarten in Newton was three half days and two full days, I was shocked," said Ward Elementary School parent Aimee Pandey. "Kindergarten was shorter than preschool." 

The district currently has a "hybrid" kindergarten model, where students attend some full days and some half days. The groups are split up, allowing only half the students at a time to stay for the afternoons, which gives an opportunity for individualized instruction.

A similar hybrid model is used in Wellesley. 

According to Horace Mann Elementary parent Emily Norton, the district formed a full-day kindergarten "task force" two years ago, but nothing has happened since.

"Two years ago, the future looked bright in terms of making the change...two years after the task force, nothing has happened," Norton said. 

During the fiscal 2013 budget process, Newton administrators said they looked into the possibility of transitioning into a full day kindergarten program. However, the district estimated the cost for the program would be about $1.2 million. 

That $1.2 million would fund aides in every kindergarten classroom, a model that administrators said is used in Newton's "peer districts."

With the district's enrollment on the rise, Superintendent David Fleishman said Monday night that the $1.2 million needed to be used to hire teachers and add classrooms to cope with enrollment growth.

"I've been here two years and we had a $4 million budget gap the first year and a ton of enrollment growth," Fleishman said Monday night. "It has been a real challenge fiscally." 

Earlier this year, Fleishman said that money would also be invested in early literature and mental health support in the elementary schools

Nevertheless, some parents argued Monday night that investing in full day kindergarten will help with academic needs and costs in later grades. 

"One must consider not just the cost of action, but the cost of inaction, said Franklin Elementary School parent Roger Mantie. "The failure to implement [full-day kindergarten] simply shifts costs down the line."

During Monday's meeting, parents argued several other benefits to having full-day kindergarten, including the idea of keeping schedules consistent of kids.

Going from a full-day preschool program to a half-day kindergarten program is "moving backwards", several parents said, and the hybrid model can be disruptive for children as well as a cost burden for families who have to find after-school care for those half days.

Some parents also expressed frustration as to whether they would stay in the Newton Public Schools if the full-day kindergarten is not implemented. 

"[At my school in Korea] indoor plumbing didn't exist, but I had full-day kindergarten" said future Cabot Elementary parent and Bread & Chocolate owner Eunice Feller. "To think my son, a generation and a half removed, would get a lesser education is appalling to me as an immigrant." 

  • Do you want to see full-day kindergarten in Newton?

    (Voting has been closed for this question)
    • Yes
        10 (90%)
    • No
        1 (9%)
    • I'm not sure
        0 (0%)
    Total votes: 11
  • Your vote will only count once. This is not a scientific poll. View Results Vote!
Related Topics: Newton Public Schools, Newton School Committee, Newton full-day kindergarten, and full-day kindergarten
What do you think about full-day kindergarten? Should Newton implement it? Tell us in the comments.

Leave a comment