American Educational Research Journal | 2019

Examining How Stakeholders at the Local, State, and National Levels Made Sense of the Changed Kindergarten

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Kindergarten in the United States has fundamentally changed. It is the new first grade where children are taught increased academic content and experience more standardized testing. There is much debate among education stakeholders about these changes, but such discussions are often siloed— making it difficult to know whether these changes reflect these stakeholders’ understandings of kindergarten specifically or public education in general. This explorative video-cued multivocal ethnographic study addressed this issue by examining how local, state, and national education stakeholders made sense of the changed kindergarten. Such findings provide insight into what it is they viewed driving these academic and instructional changes, what opportunities for further reform exist, and whether these stakeholders will work to support and/or alter such changes.

Volume 56
Pages 822 - 867
DOI 10.3102/0002831218804152
Language English
Journal American Educational Research Journal

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