2015-02-18

This article documents the challenges that young children face as

Batas pambansa blg 232 education act of 1982 from Jared Ram Juezan

they move from kindergarten to first grade and the important role that

elementary school counselors can play in working with students,

parents/caregivers, and teachers during this critical period of

development. Research- and practitioner-based recommendations for

effective interventions are discussed.

**********

Many school counselors have witnessed a heartrending scene at the

start of the school year, in which distressed young children are facing

new and challenging situations and tasks. The early education literature

validates the notion that not only is the move from preschool to

kindergarten daunting, but transitioning from a relatively warm, caring,

child-centered kindergarten environment to a potentially more

intimidating and less flexible first-grade classroom is also quite a

struggle for many children and their parents/caregivers (Yeom, 1998). In

fact, this transition has been called a critical period for young

children’s social and academic development (Entwisle &

Alexander, 1998; La Paro, Pianta, & Cox, 2000a, 2000b; Toohey &

Day, 2001) and is especially demanding for children at risk for school

failure (Marcon, 2000, 2002).

School counselors often are faced with the challenging task of

attending to the cognitive, social, and emotional changes that children

experience during this important time of transition. The many factors

associated with such a transition–ranging from challenging new tasks

and social situations to acclimating to various teaching strategies and

pedagogy differences between grade levels–can be overwhelming for

students. This article will identify the stressors that impact students

as well as strategies for school counselors to partner with classroom

educators to facilitate a positive transition to first grade.

TRANSITION STRESSORS

Given that kindergarten and first grade have, to varying degrees,

disparate educational structures, processes, and curricula, young

children often experience significant challenges during the transition

process. These may include behavioral, cognitive, social-emotional, and

physical concerns (Fox, Dunlap, & Cushing, 2002; La Paro et al.,

2000a, 2000b; Yeom, 1998). School counselors can help to minimize these

challenges by recognizing potential stressors and offering services and

interventions involving all educational stakeholders, including the

children and their parents/caregivers.

Kindergarten teachers tend to be well educated in what are and are

not developmentally appropriate learning activities for 5- and

6-year-olds (Huffman & Speer, 2000). As a result, kindergarten

education is more often than not affective in nature,

“gentle,” child-paced, play-oriented, engaging, and

nonpunitive (Pianta, La Paro, Payne, Cox, & Bradley, 2002). It is

not surprising then, when asked, many schoolchildren report positive

feelings about their kindergarten experience.

In contrast, children entering first-grade classrooms for the first

time recognize immediately that things have changed. Grade 1 is the

onset of formal learning for most school districts, and it presents

children with a far more ritualized and structured learning environment.

Children’s attention is redirected from following their own

educational interests to attaining externally imposed, preset academic

competencies, such as reading and mathematics. Moreover, first graders

are faced, often for the initial time, with having to attend school for

a full day without a longer rest break and to stay focused on topics

that seem to be irrelevant and uninteresting to their worlds. All the

while they must sit still in uncomfortable chairs and behave for

extended periods. They also are discovering their social roles in the

classroom, at recess, and in the lunchroom–often with bigger and more

mature children. In addition, they are learning to accept the lead and

control of several adult figures other than their main teacher (Entwisle

& Alexander, 1998; Toohey & Day, 2001). Another disconcerting element for some children is that within first grade, educational

practices are highly variable from teacher to teacher and school to

school (National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Early

Child Care Research Network, 2002).

Parents and other caregivers also may note that the teaching

methods (and their theoretical underpinnings) used in first-grade

classrooms influence how their children perceive and experience the new

learning environment. These perceptions and experiences have the

potential to impact students socially and emotionally as well as

educationally due to increased anxiety related to outcome-based

classroom pedagogy–perhaps a drastic change from the nurturing

environment of their kindergarten classrooms. The two major approaches

normally found in these classrooms are labeled

“learner-centered,” using constructivist pedagogy, versus

“teacher-centered,” using direct instruction methods (Joyce,

Weil, & Calhoun, 2003).

RECOMMENDATIONS FOR BEST PRACTICE

What can be problematic for many children provides elementary

school counselors with a good opportunity to assist and develop close

relationships with youngsters and their parents/caregivers early on in

their school experience. Drawing from existing literature and the ideas

suggested by current practitioners, we next outline various strategies

to ease the transition process for children and their families.

What the Research Suggests

The following suggestions are research-based guidelines to direct

school counselor interventions and services within the framework of a

comprehensive school counseling program (American School Counselor

Association, 2005). Because kindergarten to Grade 1 transition studies

are relatively sparse and further application research will continue to

be published in this area, school counselors should periodically revisit the current education and school counseling literature to update their

practical knowledge base.

Solicit collaboration among all relevant educational partners. Not

only must kindergarten and first-grade teachers be involved early on in

preparing the children for the transition, but parents/caregivers and

the children themselves need to be included in the collaboration process

as well (Entwisle & Alexander, 1998; Fox et al., 2002; La Paro et

al., 2000a, 2000b; Yeom, 1998). The research consistently suggests that

all key parties must be involved, and especially parents/caregivers, in

the grade transition process (Marcon, 1993; National Center for Early

Development and Learning [NCEDL], 1998; Toohey & Day, 2001).

In three multistate studies of transition practices, researchers

followed pre-kindergarteners through first grade (see NCEDL, n.d.; also,

e.g., Early, Pianta, Taylor, & Cox, 2001; Pianta, Cox, Taylor, &

Early, 1999). Some important yet troubling findings were reported, for

example in an NCEDL study: Only about 50% of kindergarten teachers

surveyed reported conducting meetings with the children’s future

Grade 1 teachers to discuss stability in the curriculum from one grade

to the next. No more than 56% of the kindergarten teachers said they

were arranging for their students to visit a first-grade classroom.

Fewer than 25% of the kindergarten teachers reported showing up at

general transition meetings, distributing to parents information on how

placements in first grade are accomplished, attending meetings to

prepare transitions for individual students, or organizing transition

activities for children with special needs. Most obviously missing are

practices that engage the parents/caregivers in relevant decisions about

who will be their child’s first-grade teacher and what the

expectations are for first grade (Pianta et al.).

Obviously, school counselors can encourage and assist with

implementing these collaborative partnerships more fully (Amatea,

Daniels, Bringman, & Vandiver, 2004; Bryan & Holcomb-McCoy,

2004). These supportive relationships are especially important in

schools that find these K-first grade student transitions generally

problematic (e.g., urban schools with a high percentage of minority and

low-income students; Pianta et al., 1999; Schulting, Malone, &

Dodge, 2005).

Finally, elementary school counselors in consort with other

building educators need to adopt a broad-based educational approach is

guide transition practices. While it is beyond the scope of this article

to detail this idea, either Bronfenbrenner and Morris’s (1998)

ecological-developmental framework or Pianta’s (1999) systems

approach to education could be used as a “big picture” map

(see also Rimm-Kaufman & Pianta, 2000; Rous, Harbin, &

McCormick, 2006). In other words, as school counselors, teachers, and

parents/caregivers collaborate on helping children transition from grade

to grade, they should consider the children’s important subsystems

(e.g., culture and community, ethnicity, family) that influence these

changes (Pianta et al., 1999; Schulting et al., 2005).

By looking beyond the immediate goal–that is, moving a

kindergarten child to first grade without considering other important

factors affecting the placement–strong ties can be created among

salient members of students’ subsystems (e.g., all relevant

educators, parents/caregivers and extended family, religious leaders).

By doing so, the continuity from early education programs to

kindergarten and Grade 1 can be more fluid and less distressing for

youngsters and their parents/caregivers (La Paro et al., 2000a, 2000b).

In short, “systems thinking” needs to be applied whenever

educators make major changes in students’ school/classroom

placements, schedules, and interventions (Pianta, 1999; Pianta et al.,

1999; Rimm-Kaufman & Pianta, 2000; Rouset al., 2006). A

research-based transition plan needs to be in place.

Encourage pedagogy evaluation. To help kindergarteners adjust more

readily to first grade, learner-centered classrooms are generally more

effective than the more conventional pedagogies such as direct

instruction. School counselors can familiarize themselves with this

pedagogy and facilitate a discussion session with the early elementary

teachers. Such a meeting would allow a time for teachers to share the

pedagogy used in their classrooms with the school counselors and each

other. In addition, it would serve as a time for school counselors to

share current research related to pedagogy and emotional and behavioral

concerns that potentially impact student achievement. School counselors

can partner with elementary school teachers to share expertise in an

effort to attend to the students’ social, emotional, and

educational needs. Ideally such a conversation would evolve into a

sharing of concrete suggestions for classroom design, organization, and

curriculum design from a learner-centered pedagogy.

Avoid the use of delayed entry into kindergarten, transition or

developmental classrooms, and retention interventions. When

kindergarteners struggle academically or otherwise, these three

interventions are generally used, although there is little research

evidence to undergird them. For example, even as the practice has not

been supported in the literature, parents and teachers generally believe

that holding young children out of kindergarten for one year, perhaps

until they turn 6, will subsequently smooth the transition to first

grade. While the rationale seems palpable–that is, provide children

with extra time to further mature and develop the skills needed for a

successful first-grade experience–it appears that this practice is

largely unhelpful over the long run (Mantzicopoulos &

Neuharth-Pritchett, 1998). Most “underdeveloped” youngsters

will catch up to their peers by perhaps Grade 3.

Mantzicopoulos’s (2003a) longitudinal study examining the

efficacy of developmental Grade 1 transition (developmental first-grade

classroom) programs provided little evidence that these classrooms are

superior to other ways of remediating kindergarteners’ deficient pre-academic and social skills. Interestingly, in an earlier

investigation of teachers’ perceptions of the effectiveness of

first-grade transition classes, Grade 1 teachers largely supported the

practice and viewed it as helpful, despite negative empirical evidence

to the contrary (Horm-Wingerd, Carelia, & Warford, 1993).

It is also tempting for kindergarten teachers to suggest

nonpromotion of low-achieving children. However, retention tends to be a

less than satisfactory alternative. This practice has significant

emotional and social costs for the retained children and does not

necessarily ensure that they will be successful learners in subsequent

grades (Holloway, 2003; Marcon, 2002; Peel, 1997). Instead, in most

cases, allow the child to move on to first grade, while providing

scaffolding services and both educational and counseling interventions

for the child, teacher, and parents/caregivers.

Use family-oriented and small and large group interventions early

on. When problem behaviors such as nervousness or reluctance to

participate emerge before, during, or after the transitioning process,

they are most effectively addressed using family-centered early

intervention strategies that take into account all the individual and

contextual variables (home, school, neighborhood) in play (Amatea et

al., 2004; Fox et al., 2002; Mantzicopoulos, 2003b). In other words, do

not wait to see if children “grow” out of their problems. They

often are exacerbated with time, not ameliorated. Classroom meetings

(Edwards & Mullis, 2003), artwork (Hale & Boozer, 1998), and

small and large group bibliotherapy (Nicholson & Pearson, 2003), for

example, may be the most useful tools to reduce children’s stress

and fears about transitioning to formal education. In addition, these

types of interventions may provide some insights into children’s

literacy development.

What Practitioners Suggest

In an effort to integrate research with current practice, six

elementary school counselors and two classroom teachers were asked to

share, anecdotally, their kindergarten to first grade transition

interventions. Of the four emerging themes discussed above as best

practice recommendations, the respondents we talked to had clear

preferences. The transition strategies most cited focused on (a)

building a collaborative relationship between the kindergarten and

first-grade teachers, and (b) providing direct student

assistance/interventions. Regrettably, including the parents/caregivers

as educational partners appeared to be absent in the interventions

shared.

Kindergarten and first-grade students often are provided with

various opportunities to meet, express concerns, and share experiences

as well as the wisdom gained through successfully making the transition.

One example of such direct student assistance was shared by elementary

school counselor Naomi Nichols (personal communication, September 28,

2006). She has the first graders at her school write letters to the

kindergarteners at the end of the school year, in an effort to provide

both advice and encouragement to those preparing for the transition. The

counsel shared in the letters included heartfelt recommendations such as

“Sound more intelligent,” which were circulated to the

kindergartners and then later posted on a bulletin board in the

classroom.

Several other collaborative direct service interventions at the

same Seattle-area school included having kindergarteners enrolled in a

half-day program stay through lunch and practice eating in the school

cafeteria, where they later eat as first graders. Initially students

practiced with lunches packed at home and several days later went

through the lunch line, learning to pick up trays and pay for their

food. Kindergarten students also were given permission to tour several

first-grade classrooms to learn where the classrooms were located and

what they looked like and to perhaps observe the similarities and

differences compared to their current kindergarten classrooms.

Carol Wahl (personal communication, September 21, 2006), an

elementary school counselor (Enumclaw School District, WA), reported

several interventions practiced in her building including “Move-Up

Day,” in which kindergarten students spend 45 minutes in what will

be their first-grade classroom the following year, getting to know their

future classroom teacher and classmates. An example of a teacher

collaboration activity involves weekly staff meetings in which teams of

kindergarten and first-grade teachers meet to discuss various

students’ educational and transitional needs. A structural strategy

that one school has implemented includes utilizing a district-wide

full-day kindergarten in an attempt to reduce the separation anxiety

surrounding transition difficulties as kindergarteners familiarize

themselves with more time away from home and their parents/caregivers.

Variations of these student-focused strategies also were shared

including opportunities at the end of the school year for entire

classrooms of kindergarteners and first graders to meet in first-grade

classrooms for reading and coloring as well as a “buddy

system,” in which kindergarteners who have recently participated in

a graduation ceremony are partnered with first graders to spend an hour

in their classrooms to observe various subjects being taught at the

first-grade level. Although it is exciting to hear what is currently

being implemented to encourage collaboration and, thus, assist in the

transition process, evidence of a lack of the spectrum of interventions

recommended in the literature in current practice points to a need for

expanded services and ongoing research. Moreover, feedback from school

counselors and classroom educators suggests that some districts continue

to utilize interventions that are thought to hinder the transition

process, such as creating transitional or developmental classrooms for

younger kindergarteners, including those with summer birthdays.

SUMMARY AND FINAL REMARKS

Any grade transition can be distressing for students and their

parents/caregivers, but this change is particularly challenging for

youngsters (and their families) as they move from kindergarten to first

grade. Few consistent and effective research-based interventions to

smooth the transition are applied schoolwide. Based on the literature,

we recommend that elementary school counselors do their part by

encouraging more collaboration among all relevant stakeholders. The

children and their parents/caregivers must be included in the

preparation and implementation phases of transition. Moreover,

counselors should consult closely with first-grade teachers to work

together to establish or enhance their learner-centered pedagogy. As

children experience difficulties, the research suggests that the more

conventional and punitive approaches of delaying entry, holding children

back in kindergarten, or moving them into a transitional or

developmental first-grade classroom are not as effective as

family-directed and small and large group interventions. Such tools can

greatly assist students and their families with the adjustment process.

This underscores the need for counselors to be well trained in family

work. Elementary school counselors, working within the context of a

comprehensive school counseling program (e.g., ASCA National Model[R])

and a viable transition model (e.g., Rous et al., 2006), can help young

children, teachers, and parents/caregivers make this critical period of

development less stressful and more positive through their

prevention-oriented interventions.

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Christopher A. Sink, Ph.D., is professor and chair, School

Counseling and Psychology, Seattle Pacific University, Seattle, WA.

E-mail: csink@spu.edu

Cher N. Edwards, Ph.D., is an assistant professor of school

counseling, and Sarah J. Weir is a graduate assistant in school

counseling, at Seattle Pacific University.

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