
Gone were the play kitchens, sand and water tables, and dress-up areas;
half-days were now full days. Instead, there were whiteboards, and the
kindergartners, in classes of up to 27, practiced reading and math on
work sheets on desks at P.S. 101, also known as the School in the
Gardens.
Play came in the form of “choice time,” a roughly 30-minute afternoon
period during which each child chose what blocks or toys in the
classroom to work with, and at recess, which was often truncated by the
time it took for every child to calm down and form an orderly line back
to class.
About a month ago, about half of the kindergarten parents signed a
letter to the principal, Valerie Capitulo-Saide, asking for more
unstructured time in the school day, an extra recess period and better
procedures in recess. Ms. Capitulo-Saide gave them one extra gym period
a week and no longer required students to form perfect lines at recess,
one parent said.
P.S. 101 “is a high performing school,” Ms. Capitulo-Saide said in an
e-mail. “Our collaborative decision-making process includes input from
parents, teachers and administrators. As a result of our collaboration,
we have added 30 minutes of additional physical education instruction
per week for kindergarten students while maintaining strong
instruction.”
Time and space for imaginative play in city schools seem to be shrinking
as the academic emphasis on reading and math grows, said Clara
Hemphill, who researches the city’s schools. “Across the city, we’ve
seen dress-up areas taken away and replaced with computer desks,” Ms.
Hemphill said. That has brought a quiet backlash from some parents.
Some parents at P.S. 101 said they wanted to see a greater emphasis on
play on days when children cannot go outside; now, they are sometimes
plopped down to watch television cartoons. “We wanted something like
board games or Simon Says, but I think the staffing was too much to
organize,” Donna Chin, a kindergarten parent, said.
The school also organized an effort to win money from an online
competition to fix up a disused outdoor area into a garden it is calling
a “kinder” (rhymes with minder) garden. The school is asking for
$25,000; the deadline to vote is Jan. 31. The goal is to use the garden
as an alternative learning site that creates an enriching outdoor
learning environment instead of an all-day confined classroom model.
Early childhood homework is another issue. Each Monday, the
kindergartners get a packet of worksheets they are supposed to complete
by Friday. There are generally 10 to 12 reading, writing and math
worksheets each week. Parents are also asked to read to their children.
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