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School district moves to all-day kindergarten
By Danna Webster
KP News
This fall, Key Peninsula
kindergarten students will stay at school all day. They
will ride the same buses as the other elementary
students. There will be no midday bus transportation.
“Next year, there will be all-day
kindergarten at all schools with no cost to families,”
said Student Services Executive Director Sarah
Drinkwater. Research shows that all-day kindergarten
“benefits all types of learning: math, reading, social
skills and independent care habits,” she said.

Minter Creek
kindergartners during reading time in Anita
Huysman's all-day class.
Photo by Mindi La Rose |

Evergreen
Elementary kindergartener Alexandra Emens,
from
Gail Mitchell’s class, shows off her math
work.
Photo by Danna Webster |
According to PHS Superintendent
Terry Bouck, the idea to move forward with all-day
kindergarten was initiated by then-Superintendent Jim
Coolican. The new state mandate is that all 1,267
schools will have full-day kindergarten classes by the
year 2013, and the state will gradually fund all-day K
programs statewide starting next year, based on poverty
levels. It would be a few years before PSD would receive
any of that new funding.
Many school districts in the state
have started considering the move before it became a
legislative mandate, and Peninsula School District has
been a pioneer in this new thinking, which educators say
is supported by extensive research.
PSD has been preparing for the
all-day K program for the past two years. This year,
about half of all elementary schools offered all-day
kindergarten; however, the second portion of the day was
optional for parents and was tuition-based.
With reports of a district deficit
of $4 million, how can it afford to put a new program in
place? “The $4 million deficit is a spend-down reserve,”
Bouck said, pointing to the declining enrollment as the
principal factor that led to the district using reserve
monies to cover some costs.
According to Bouck, the money for
the kindergarten program is not from basic education
funds; it is all new money from Initiative 728 funding.
About 60 percent of those funds are used for reduction
in class size, and about 40 percent will go toward
funding all-day kindergarten.
“The number one is not to impact
class size in the district,” Bouck said. “Anything else,
but we must not impact that.”
The current class size is 18-22
students. But a few years ago, there was an experiment
with a class size of 18 or less, according to Andrea
Jewell, a recently retired kindergarten teacher from
Vaughn Elementary School. It is her opinion that
lowering class size benefits kindergarten students more
than a full-day program. She has written her opinion in
newspaper editorials.
“A few years ago we had a one year
experiment with smaller class sizes of 18 or less. This
gave a more relaxed feeling to the day and allowed the
teachers to individualize the instruction. They didn’t
have to deal with behaviors caused by exhaustion and
stress. It was found that the children progressed much
farther than in more crowded classrooms,” she wrote. “I
am a retired kindergarten teacher who shares the
concerns of parents about the all-day kindergarten being
too much for many children. Seven to eight hours a day,
including transportation, has been too stressful for
many in the all-day kindergarten at Vaughn.”
Bouck said the schools can be
flexible and accommodate their schedules for parents who
are concerned that a full day is too long. Children can
attend kindergarten as a half-day student, if the
parents can provide the midday transportation.
“Our concern is about the student,”
Bouck said. “(The program) has got to be what is in the
best interest of each child.”
Evergreen Elementary Principal
Jacque Crisman has had all-day kindergarten at her
building for three years. When Evergreen started the
full-day program, she was worried that “it was pushing
too much. It’s not,” she said. “Kids are so much more
capable than we give them credit for. They are like
sponges. At the beginning of the school year, fatigue is
hard for everybody. The first year, we thought we would
provide naps. But the kids just go, go, go all day long:
paint, play house, work on computers, read, sing songs,
play blocks and have full lessons in math, reading,
writing and science. Three days a week they have PE and
two days they have music.” There is a half-day option at
Evergreen but no families have taken it. “Look at what
they might miss,” Crisman said.
Earlier in her career, Crisman
taught kindergarten. She had two classes per day and in
the two and a half hours of each class she tried to do
all that a full-day program would provide. Those were
stressful years and she was eager to leave kindergarten.
She said the stress of not having the time to do all
things she wanted to do for each class made that
teaching assignment the worst in her career, which has
ranged from primary grades to university level.
Full-day kindergarten makes an
important difference, according to Crisman. It is all
about time. “The time the children are given is so
powerful,” she said. “Time to process, time to finish
projects, time to get things done. Fewer kids are
struggling to get done.”
Evergreen’s first all-day
kindergartners are second graders this year. They will
take the WASL next year. Crisman hopes their all-day K
education will show a positive influence on test scores.
She believes the all-day kindergarten is good addition
to the Evergreen school and credits her staff for making
a great learning environment for all the students.
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