Since the passage of No Child Left Behind (NCLB) in 2001, public schools in the United States have witnessed an influx of reforms intended to elevate students’ academic standing in a global economy. The unprecedented federal involvement in education resulting from the passage of NCLB has propelled a nationwide movement to standardize instruction, raise achievement levels, and hold schools accountable for improved student outcomes. The kindergarten classroom has not been immune to these efforts. This critical review of literature published within the years 2001-2016 synthesizes empirical and theoretical research centered on US kindergarten post-NCLB. Connecting NCLB’s increased emphasis on standards and accountability to issues of kindergart...
This paper examines the history of kindergarten from Froebel (1967a) to the current issues that pert...
This short article on family living appeared in Broome County Living magazine, published by Cornell ...
Recent accounts suggest that accountability pressures have trickled down into the early elementary g...
The expectations of both teachers and students of Kindergarten have drastically changed over the pas...
Kindergarten has changed drastically since it was introduced to the United States in the 1850s. Rece...
Twenty years ago, kindergarten was a year of informal education designed to help a child develop som...
Kindergarten within the American educational system little resembles the original ideals of its foun...
Young children are increasingly expected to perform at predetermined levels in various developmental...
Current educational refonn initiatives under No Child Left Behind (NCLB) have pushed down formal aca...
This literature review explores the perceived dichotomy in kindergarten between child-centered, deve...
The United States is in the bottom quartile of formally enrolled preschoolers in the developed count...
The Commonwealth of Virginia is used as a representative case to illustrate the implication of feder...
Using the National Center for Early Development and Learning’s Transition Practices Survey (1996), R...
Many early childhood learners enter kindergarten not academically and social-emotionally prepared. T...
In response to No Child Left Behind (NCLB), opportunities for play-based experiences in classrooms h...
This paper examines the history of kindergarten from Froebel (1967a) to the current issues that pert...
This short article on family living appeared in Broome County Living magazine, published by Cornell ...
Recent accounts suggest that accountability pressures have trickled down into the early elementary g...
The expectations of both teachers and students of Kindergarten have drastically changed over the pas...
Kindergarten has changed drastically since it was introduced to the United States in the 1850s. Rece...
Twenty years ago, kindergarten was a year of informal education designed to help a child develop som...
Kindergarten within the American educational system little resembles the original ideals of its foun...
Young children are increasingly expected to perform at predetermined levels in various developmental...
Current educational refonn initiatives under No Child Left Behind (NCLB) have pushed down formal aca...
This literature review explores the perceived dichotomy in kindergarten between child-centered, deve...
The United States is in the bottom quartile of formally enrolled preschoolers in the developed count...
The Commonwealth of Virginia is used as a representative case to illustrate the implication of feder...
Using the National Center for Early Development and Learning’s Transition Practices Survey (1996), R...
Many early childhood learners enter kindergarten not academically and social-emotionally prepared. T...
In response to No Child Left Behind (NCLB), opportunities for play-based experiences in classrooms h...
This paper examines the history of kindergarten from Froebel (1967a) to the current issues that pert...
This short article on family living appeared in Broome County Living magazine, published by Cornell ...
Recent accounts suggest that accountability pressures have trickled down into the early elementary g...