Building a Foundation for Academic Success

Building a Foundation for Academic Success

The department works to prepare young children for lifelong learning by offering various initiatives at the preschool level. Explore these programs from the Early Learning navigation menu.


Announcements

Spring 2019 Trainings
Date CORE Region
February 19, 2019 First TN
February 22, 2019 East TN
February 25, 2019 Upper Cumberland
February 27, 2019 South Central
February 28, 2019 Mid Cumberland
March 1, 2019 Southwest
March 4, 2019 Southeast
March 11, 2019   Northwest
Fall 2018 Trainings
Date CORE Region
October 22, 2018 Southeast
October 23, 2018 First
October 24, 2018 East
October 25, 2018 Upper Cumberland
October 26, 2018 Mid Cumberland (Nashville)
October 29, 2018 Southwest (Memphis)
October 30, 2018 Northwest
October 31, 2018 Southwest (Jackson)
November 1, 2018 Mid Cumberland (Clarksville)
November 2, 2018 South Central    

Spring 2019 Training dates will be released in early January.

Pre-K CLASS Observations: The Office of Early Learning is committed to monitoring the progress of voluntary pre-K programs to optimize quality learning and prevent potential achievement gaps in the early years when children’s brains develop the most. To this end, we have partnered with Teachstone to collect baseline data on the effectiveness of classroom interactions among pre-K teachers and children.  In spring 2018, we collected data from a statewide sampling of 200 classrooms.  This fall, additional voluntary pre-K and PDG classrooms will participate in this baseline data collection effort.  Teachstone will schedule an unannounced site visit between October 2 – December 14.  At this site visit, Teachstone staff will conduct observations using the Classroom Assessment Scoring System (CLASS), an observation tool that measures the quality of teacher-student interactions.  These observations will last about 2 hours per classroom.  The Teachstone CLASS observer may move around the room, however, they will remain inconspicuous to the best of their ability so as not to interfere with classroom activities.  Please find CLASS Observation FAQs for your reference.

Teachstone will reach out directly to selected schools to notify them about their participation and provide a two week window for the site visit.  Please contact us if you have any scheduling conflicts for your VPK classrooms which would prohibit the observation during this window.

NASHVILLE—Education Commissioner Candice McQueen today released the results from the first year of a new pilot to improve the quality of teaching and learning in early childhood programs. Results from the pilot, called Early Literacy Matters, showed students generally increased in their reading comprehension and literacy abilities, and students whose teachers received additional coaching saw added growth in areas like teacher-student engagement and age-appropriate reading skills.

Over the 2017-18 school year, about 7,000 students in more than 700 classrooms across the state were part of the Early Literacy Matters pilot. The pilot focused on daycare schools and childcare centers approved or licensed by the Tennessee Department of Education or Tennessee Department of Human Services (TDHS), who collaborated closely on this work. These programs serve children ages six weeks to four years old. To participate, teachers completed a variety of trainings and submitted student assignments, and some educators were selected for additional coaching, site visits, and assignment feedback. All who participated received class sets of a variety of high-quality books from the Governor’s Books from Birth Foundation.

Overall, at the end of the year, participants noted that there had been meaningful improvements in their literacy practices, classrooms became more literacy-focused, and students scored better on a post-pilot age-appropriate exam that measures their early literacy skills, like comprehension and phonetics. In classrooms where educators received further coaching and feedback, teachers were more likely to read aloud to children, explicitly teach the meaning of a word or phrase, listen to children tell stories or anecdotes, ask open-ended questions, see better engagement among teachers and children, and have a rich amount of student writing that went beyond basic handwriting lessons.

“Literacy is a foundational issue for children’s development, and we know when children become readers, they become lifelong learners,” Commissioner McQueen said. “The results we see from this pilot are incredibly encouraging. We want to learn from what is working here and create more opportunities across the state for our youngest learners to get a strong start in reading.”

“Early Literacy Matters helps support our Two-Generation strategy to serving the needs of parents and children,” said TDHS Commissioner Danielle W. Barnes. “Reading is an essential part of the development young children receive in child care and I believe the partnership we have with this program will help us continue building a Thriving Tennessee.”

The Early Literacy Matters pilot launched in 2017 as the department sought to further expand its work to ensure more children have access to high-quality early reading and learning opportunities, which research has shown is influential in students’ later success. Through its Read to be Ready campaign, the department has taken on a number of initiatives that work toward the goal of having more students reading on grade level by the end of third grade. The Early Literacy Matters pilot is an additional step to ensure the state’s youngest learners are receiving the enrichment they need and have exposure and engagement with high-quality books as they develop.

The counties and districts participating in the first year of the pilot included Anderson, Blount, Campbell, Claiborne, Davidson, Greene, Hamblen, Sevier, Shelby, Sullivan, Unicoi, Union, and Washington. The department is planning to expand in the next stage to additional districts, schools, and DHS childcare centers.

For more information about the Early Literacy Matters pilot, contact Misty Moody, the director of school-based support for the office of early learning, at Misty.Moody@tn.gov. For media inquiries, please contact Sara Gast, director of communications, at 615-532-6260 or Sara.Gast@tn.gov.

At the Early Childhood Summit on July 23, 2018, Tennessee Commissioner of Education, Candice McQueen, spoke to educators about the importance of having high expectations in early childhood education. Read her remarks in the blog post The Importance of Quality Early Education.