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COVID's Effect on Pre-K Learning and Efforts to Grow Classrooms Post-Pandemic

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Colins Sanders
M.L. Schultze
/
WKSU
Colins Sanders is part of the increasing emphasis Canton schools are putting on preschool education.

Preschool鈥攙iewed as potentially the great equalizer in education鈥攇ot walloped in the pandemic. Kids disappeared from the rolls, and the loss was greatest in communities of color and poverty. But coming out of the shutdown, efforts are underway to recover and, perhaps, grow preschool post-pandemic.

Dayree Stokes and son Judah
M.L. Schultze
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WKSU
Dayree Stokes鈥 son Judah was named a Canton City preschool student of the month, despite struggles that came with the pandemic. As a foster kid, Stokes says she was among those who many thought would fail. But she didn鈥檛, and she says her son won鈥檛 either with the help of community resources like SPARK and the realignment of Canton schools.

Judah Israel Stokes was three when the pandemic struck, upending plans for him to follow his sister鈥檚 footsteps, literally, to preschool. Like districts throughout Ohio, Canton City went virtual, increasing demands on working and single parents. Mom, Dayree, said it was overwhelming.

鈥淚t was like, okay, I need a moment. This is hard. Help!鈥 she said.

Stokes said everyone was trying hard to make virtual education work. She was even a bit hopeful that Canton鈥檚 plan to put iPads in the hands of every child, even preschoolers, would pay benefits.

鈥淚 thought it would go okay because it鈥檚 a tablet, you know. Kids love tablets,鈥 she laughed.

She quickly learned that being screen savvy is no substitute for the learning that comes from play and interaction, and the science supports her.

A summary of research by the concluded overall that children are more successful in school and beyond if they are given a strong foundation in the earliest years of their life. The rest is in the details: just how early learning and school readiness approaches affect everything from language to social-emotional skills, how to ensure quality programs and how to measure the progress kids make.

Groundwork Ohio

is lobbying Ohio to make a bigger commitment to preschool education and child care. Director Shannon Jones notes the state has no comprehensive preschool program, and the earliest of childhood education is often considered ancillary.

But, she notes, 80% of the brain is built in the first three years of life.

鈥淚t鈥檚 literally setting that brain architecture that鈥檚 not only supporting the academic learning potential, but the social and emotional and executive functioning skills that are essential鈥 for life, she said.

Keith Freund
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WKSU

And for today鈥檚 preschoolers, a third of that crucial time has been disrupted by the pandemic. The official kindergarten readiness scores won鈥檛 be released until fall, but the preliminary numbers show that鈥檚 been costly.

The percentage of kids on track for language and literacy has dropped from more than 60% to just a little more than 50%.

And Jones says those results may underestimate the problem. Enrollment in Ohio preschools has never been high but dropped by more than 25% in 2020. And children most likely to drop out were those who are Black, non-English speakers, disabled or poor.

鈥淪o the ones that we really need to capture, identify, understand and then provide intervention to, aren鈥檛 even being tested,鈥 Jones noted.

For more on how the pandemic disrupted early learning in Ohio, click

The dropout rate was highest among virtual programs. And the schools have been trying to recover. Canton City was among the first urban schools in Ohio to return to in-person instruction, while still offering virtual learning pre-K through 12.

Tammy Mishak's preschool classroom
M.L. Schultze
/
WKSU
Tammy Mishak鈥檚 preschool classroom at Worley School looks a lot different than in the pre-pandemic days. The clusters of tables are gone; desks are 6 feet apart. During 鈥渂rain breaks鈥 the kids play at separate centers (though that鈥檚 loosened to two per station in recent weeks).

Tammy Mishak鈥檚 preschool classroom at Worley School looks a lot different than in the pre-pandemic days. The clusters of tables are gone; desks are six feet apart. During 鈥渂rain breaks鈥 the kids play at separate centers (though that鈥檚 loosened to two per station in recent weeks).

The Akron Zoo used to bring critters into the class. That鈥檚 gone virtual, replaced with a video of the keeper and a box for each child with a stuffed version of hedgehogs, mealworms, grooming goods, and 鈥渆motion wheels.鈥

Aamilah Culleer plays in preschool classroom
M.L. Schultze
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WKSU
Aamilah Culler takes a break from caring for her stuffed hedgehog to care for her baby doll and critique a classmate鈥檚 plastic-pizza choices. In recent weeks, Canton has allowed the children to get a bit closer together during 鈥渂rain breaks鈥 at play stations.

Despite the social distancing within the classroom, Mishak says her children still incorporation important interaction.

鈥淭hey were making cards for one another and pictures for one another and giving it to them, so that social-emotional skill was still developing, even as they were 6 feet apart and masks on,鈥 she said.

Because other children remain virtual, class sizes are smaller this year. Mishak has 15, a size she wishes would become the norm. It won鈥檛.

Preschool student Aunabella Hughes colors at desk
M.L. Schultze
/
WKSU
Aunabella Hughes鈥 desk is a careful 6 feet from the next one. Though guidelines now allow children to sit closer together, teacher Tammy Mishak says they鈥檝e established a routine that makes all of the children comfortable.

But smaller classes overall are one key piece of what Canton City has planned for preschool education next year. A new center is a key piece of an overhaul of the district that includes an expansion of arts programs, realigning elementary grades and a new virtual academy.

For more on Canton City Schools Design for Excellence, click .

Preschool teacher Tammy Mishak
M.L. Schultze
/
WKSU
Tammy Mishak says her students' return to the classroom meant a lot of sanitizing, but the preschoolers quickly adapted to masks and picked up their social interaction growth, at a 6-foot distance.

Mishak says she鈥檒l miss Worley but is excited at the prospect of a single place where preschool is paramount.

Linnea Olbon is Canton鈥檚 director of early childhood education. The preschool plan promises to cut costs, in part by cutting the time teachers and intervention specialists were traveling among schools. It also promises to increase support services for children and teachers. And the district has come with a plan for door-to-door transportation for all 321 children.

Canton Early Childhood Education Director Linnea Olbon
M.L. Schultze
/
WKSU
Canton Early Childhood Education Director Linnea Olbon says the preschool center will save money, increase support, cut class sizes, and include door-to-door transportation.

Olbon says if all goes right, people will find 鈥渋t is going to be a very welcoming place, very student centered. Obviously it will be organized chaos, of course,鈥 she said. 鈥淛ust a lot of love, a lot of love.鈥

Olbon believes some kind of realignment would have occurred without the pandemic. But COVID-19 contributed a sense of urgency.

Advocate Shannon Jones says Canton鈥檚 plan is promising except for one thing. The numbers are too few. Statewide, she says, there needs to be more quality day care and preschool education.

For the first time in her memory, she says, money is not the primary challenge facing early childhood education. Local grants, state spending, federal stimulus and even President Joe Biden鈥檚 infrastructure proposal all have line items for preschools. So, she says, it鈥檚 time to rethink the patchwork of programs in Ohio.

鈥淥r are we going to squander the opportunity by not thinking about what young children really need for lifelong success?鈥 she asked.

 Maximum McLaughlin plays with toys
M.L. Schultze
/
WKSU
Maximum McLaughlin is making an offbeat potato head for a classmate.

Dayree Stokes鈥 son, Judah, who was failing preschool, has just been named a student of the month. She credits a kindergarten preparedness program called SPARK for bridging the gap when schools went online and her son tuned out.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 feel like it鈥檚 a lost cause. It鈥檚 always a moment toward where we can save and help and build something greater than what we have had in the past,鈥 Stokes said. 鈥淪o why not take that extra step to do it?鈥

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M.L. Schultze is a freelance journalist. She spent 25 years at The Repository in Canton where she was managing editor for nearly a decade, then served as WKSU's news director and digital editor until her retirement.