· Ability to follow structured daily routines.
· Ability to dress independently.
· Ability to work independently with supervision.
· Ability to listen and pay attention to what someone else is saying.
· Ability to get along with and cooperate with other children.
· Ability to play with other children.
· Ability to follow simple rules.
· Ability to work with puzzles, scissors, coloring, paints, etc.
· Ability to write their own name or to acquire the skill with instruction.
· Ability to count or acquire the skill with instruction.
· Ability to recite the alphabet (or quickly learn with instruction).
· Ability to identify both shapes and colors.
· Ability to identify sound units in words and to recognize rhyme.
· Low family economic risk: Poor readiness for school is often associated with poverty.
· Stable family structure: Children from stable two parent homes tend to have stronger school readiness than children from one-parent homes and from homes where caregivers change frequently.
· Enriched home environment: Children from homes where parents talk with their children, engage them in conversation, read to them, and engage in forms of discipline such as time-out that encourage self-discipline have stronger readiness skills.
· Read books to and with your child.
· Spend time with your child, including playing, cuddling, and hugging.
· Create and enforce a routine within your home that your child needs to follow (i.e., times of meals, naptimes, and bedtimes).
· Take time to talk to your child.
· Encourage and answer questions from your child.
· Engage in informal reading and counting activities at home.
· Promote your child’s cognitive development by showing and encouraging your child to think about the world around them.
· Promote play that helps develop literacy skills, problem-solving skills, creativity, and imagination.
· Familiarize children with the alphabet and with numbers.
· Ensure opportunity to develop social skills through playgroups or more formal preschool activities.
· Encourage behaviors that demonstrate respect and courtesy.
· Encourage children to accept responsibility and build competence through simple chores such as putting toys away and picking up clothes.
· Read nursery rhymes, sing songs, and clap along with the rhythm.
· Play games with words that sound alike as you experience them in everyday life. (“We’re passing
· ‘Mike’s Bikes,’ that’s a funny name because they sound alike!”)
· Demonstrate how sounds blend together in familiar words. (“Let’s sign your name on Grandma’s card, T-o-m --- Tom.”)
· Play a game where the goal is to find objects with names that begin with a certain initial sound; this is a great game for walks or car rides.
· Play clapping games and clap with each distinct sound. (“‘C-a-t’ is a three clap word; so is ‘fam-i-ly.’”)
1. Children are mainly active in the classroom; that is, playing and/or working with other children or materials.
2. Children have access to various hands-on materials and activities.
3. Children receive individual and small-group time with the teachers, and not solely large-group time.
4. Children’s work is displayed in the classroom.
5. Children learn numbers and the alphabet throughout the entire day; that is, their learning of these constructs in embedded into everyday activities.
6. Children are given at least an hour to play and explore with little worksheet use.
7. Children are provided a daily opportunity to play outside.
8. Children are read to by teachers, individually, and in small-groups.
9. Children receive adapted curriculum dependent upon their own individual needs.
10. Children and parents are excited about the preschool; that is, children are happy and do not regularly cry or complain.