Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Rosemond to Headline Early Child Care Conference

John Rosemond, America’s most widely-read parenting authority, will be the featured speaker March 25 at the Fourth Annual Early Child Care & Educational Conference sponsored by First Steps of Lexington and Saluda Counties.

Rosemond will speak on the “Three Keys to Effective Discipline” during the day-long conference for early childhood educators at Batesburg-Leesville High School. The talk is scheduled to begin at 3:20 p.m. Parents and educators who would like to attend the Rosemond talk may register by calling Lexington County First Steps at (803) 532-6861. Admission is $15.

More than 400 educators from around the state are expected to attend the Early Care & Education Conference which features workshops and talks about current issues in early childhood instruction. The conference is hosted by Lexington County First Steps, Saluda County First Steps and the Midlands Chapter of the South Carolina Association for the Education of Young Children.

Rosemond is a psychologist and the author of 10 best-selling books on parenting whose syndicated column appears in The State and 200 other newspapers around the country. It is read by an estimated 10 million people weekly. He is also one of America's most in-demand public speakers, and by far the busiest in the parenting field.

In a typical year, Rosemond gives more than 200 presentations to parents, teachers, and professional groups nationwide.From 1980 to 1990, John Rosemond was in full-time private practice as a family psychologist and also taught at the Carolinas Medical Center Department of Pediatrics and Family Practice in Charlotte, NC. He now spends most of his time speaking and writing.

Friday, February 17, 2006

Kindergarten for 4-year-olds is only part of the solution

The following op/ed was published in the Charleston Post and Courier:

Kindergarten for 4-year-olds is only part of the solution
BY WALTER R. MILLER
The recent ruling by South Carolina Circuit Judge Thomas W. Cooper on the inadequacy of state funding for early childhood intervention portends ...
Wait!
Everyone knows that a stitch in time saves nine; everyone knows that watering a plant is not complicated but is absolutely essential; everyone knows that as the twig is bent so grows the tree; and everyone knows that early intervention would be good for kids.
It is, therefore, somewhat surprising to me that people are abuzz about Judge Cooper's ruling?
Is it because money is attached to be sure? But is there really a sudden epiphany that early intervention is underfunded?
"Ahaa! Why didn't we think of that before?" some are saying.
After decades of research validating the economic and social value of early intervention, lawmakers still sigh at the paltry results, and then begrudgingly part with enough of the pie to quiet things down. Legislators know that early intervention pays. Then why isn't it happening?
Is it because many still assume teachers can solve the problem? Teachers are wonderful, but this problem is bigger than their contribution.
Is it because they buy into the common assumption that children and adults can be educated out of risk, which is patently untrue? It would be like trying to educate a person out of drug addiction.
Is it because they accept the easy way out by thinking that one service can solve a complex set of problems.? That assumes that a single service is the right thing to do, but we just haven't done it well. The logic is that we just haven't hit that square peg correctly to get it into the round hole. The fact is that more school, no matter how you do school or how early you do school, is not the answer.
Too many have succumbed to the notion that parents are not accountable for the way their children act and succeed. The state has done an excellent job convincing parents that only experts can raise their children correctly. The state says, "Give us your children earlier." Parents dutifully turn over their children to the state and say, "Grow them." And when their children are not right, they say to the state, "Fix them." And when children drop out, they say, "What's wrong with the schools?"
Here is a case in point. A parent came to me and said, "I am so mad. I don't know why my second-grader can't read. I have had her in childcare since she was 18 months old."
Judge Cooper is right about one thing: Early childhood intervention is underfunded. However, he and many others are mistaken to think funding kindergarten for 4-year-old children alone is the answer.
They are mistaken because the brain is significantly developed before the age of four. The brain begins to permanently dispose of neurons and associated synapses by the millions in the years immediately after birth if those cells are not being used. Structures in the brain that manage attachment, the accommodation of stress, focus, the ability to calm oneself, and vigilance are well established and very difficult to alter by age four. The groundwork for sharing and responding to authority (teachers' first pick for school readiness) are largely established by age four. Linguistic systems and processes are almost entirely intact by age four. The structures of the brain that process visual stimuli are almost complete by age four. (Turn off the TV!)
They are mistaken also because for children at risk of failure in school - and life - the answer is expensive, intensive, comprehensive services and not a single service. A significant misstatement in a Dec. 30 Post and Courier article was that Cooper's ruling said that the state "does not adequately fund early childhood education." The ruling states that the state does not "adequately fund early childhood interventions." This is not semantics. Kindergarten education for 4-year-olds is not the answer.
Do not let anyone persuade you that you can get results that cheaply. Do not let anyone persuade you that you can get results starting at age four. Do not let anyone persuade you that "something is better than nothing." Inadequately executed intervention has a negative impact on skills. You have to start very early helping parents of at-risk children to do their job, and it is expensive. A high-quality child development class is only a piece of the solution. But it has to be provided hand-in-hand with a home program that includes nutrition-counseling, behavior-influencing methods, exclusive parent-child time, medical care, reading to the child, talking to the child and safety development.
South Carolina needs to do this correctly. As Craig T. Ramey, Georgetown University Distinguished Professor of Health Studies and director of the Georgetown Center on Health and Education and others have demonstrated again and again, interventions must have the correct timing, the correct dosage of contact, the correct duration, the correct breadth of support and the correct content. Nothing less will do. More funds? Hurray! More half-interventions? Don't bother.
You might as well send each at-risk family a check to inch them away from poverty. Who knows, they may even buy a book, but don't look for their kids in high school.
Walter R. Miller is the evaluation chair for the South Carolina First Steps Board of Trustees.

Thursday, February 16, 2006

2005 State First Steps Annual Report Now Online

The 2005 S.C. First Steps Annual Report is now online. You can read a PDF version of the document by following this link:

http://www.scfirststeps.org/annualreport.htm

Legislature Sends First Steps Bill to Governor

The following press release was issued by S.C. First Steps on February 1:

Today, the South Carolina State House of Representatives voted unanimously to renew legislation that would allow First Steps to continue helping the state’s youngest children prepare for school. Today’s House action, and the January 17 passage of identical legislation in the Senate, sends the First Steps reauthorization bill to Governor Sanford for his signature.

“First Steps has a track record of providing targeted school readiness interventions to young children, starting at birth, and their families through public-private collaborations at the community level,” said First Steps Director Susan DeVenny. “As we continue important discussions regarding Judge Cooper’s ruling and expanded services for young children in poverty, South Carolinians are increasingly aware of the long-term benefits of quality early care and education. Helping parents prepare their children early for school success results in strong returns to our state’s children and our economic future. Thanks to the House, we are a step closer to reaching those children and families who may benefit most from early learning opportunities.”

The First Steps legislation, first approved by the General Assembly in 1999, is set to expire July 1st of next year unless reauthorized. The House legislation (H. 4406), cosponsored by 79 bipartisan representatives, would reauthorize First Steps until a sunset of July 1, 2013. Along with the previously passed Senate bill, the legislation will become law upon the signature of Governor Sanford.