Tag: kindergarten age

Portland preschool teacher breaks the mold of early childhood education

Portland preschool teacher breaks the mold of early childhood education

Outside the Sunshine Center in North Portland’s Overlook neighborhood, the sounds of children playing, laughing and singing greet visitors. Inside the preschool and child care center, you’ll find founder Troy Tate.

A Black male teacher, Tate is a rarity in Oregon early childhood education, where the vast majority of professionals are white women.

As families across Oregon prepare this month to send their children back to school, Tate said he is aware he is offering something unique.

“It’s not better or worse, just different,” Tate said. “Most students aren’t going to have a Black male teacher this early in their academic career – some not at all.”

In 2022, roughly 92% of Oregon early education professionals were women, and 75% identified as white, according to a survey of the state’s early childhood care providers. That doesn’t match Oregon’s overall student population. According to the National Council on Teacher Quality, 40% of pre-K through 12th grade students are children of color compared with 15% of all teachers.

When Tate opened the school in 2010, he said some people were appreciative about sending their children to the Sunshine Center because of their gender and race.

“I hired a white woman, and I

United Way childhood program prepares kids for kindergarten

United Way childhood program prepares kids for kindergarten

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. — Campbell Park Network for Early Learning is strengthening United Way’s Quality Childhood Initiative. A partnership with a childcare provider in St. Petersburg means she is able to expand services.


What You Need To Know

  • Retmus Academy of Learning opens a second location thanks to the partnership with United Way
  • United Way’s Quality Childhood Initiative is helping preschoolers prepare for kindergarten
  • The Campbell Park Network for Early Learning focuses on increasing kindergarten readiness of children who live in the Campbell Park area

Cynthia Sumter-Scott is director and owner of Retmus Academy of Learning. Sumter-Scott first started providing daycare at home and opened a facility in St. Petersburg after partnering with United Way. She’s now preparing to open a second location in February.

“Parents are calling every day. ‘When are you going to open?’ I’m trying, I’m trying,” said Sumter-Scott.

She said she recognizes many parents are not only struggling to find childcare, but are also struggling to afford it. On top of that, the expiration of federal relief funds has forced other facilities to fold.

“The cost of living is going up so high, I’m trying to keep my childcare fees down where they can afford it,”

All Illinois school districts to offer full-day kindergarten

All Illinois school districts to offer full-day kindergarten

All Illinois school districts to offer full-day kindergarten by 2027-28


All Illinois school districts to offer full-day kindergarten by 2027-28

00:25

CHICAGO (CBS) – Every school district in Illinois will be required to establish a full-day kindergarten program by the 2027-2028 school year after Gov. JB Pritzker signed a bill into law on Wednesday.

Under the bill, every district must also establish a half-day program.

According to the National Education Association, children in full-day classes show greater achievements in reading and mathematics than those in half-day classes. Full-day kindergarten also offers several social and emotional benefits to students.

Districts that do not offer a full-day program can apply for a waiver to extend the implementation date up to two years past the 2027-2028 school year if they meet certain criteria.

“Full day kindergarten is an essential step toward getting young Illinoisans off to the best possible start in their education, which has long-lasting positive effects on reading, math, and social skills,” said Pritzker in a statement. “From Smart Start to school funding to early childhood, we’re investing heavily in our state’s youngest residents because we know that every investment we make now is paid back multiple times over by engaged