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11 Reasons Why Holistic Learning Strengthens Early Learning

Early childhood education (ECE) is critical to student success. ECE or early learning refers to education from birth to 8 years of age. 

It’s why Sprig Learning creates holistic early literacy and numeracy programs for pre-K to 3. 

Holistic learning focuses on the development of the whole child — mental, physical, emotional and spiritual.

The mental, or cognitive, aspect of learning development includes both literacy and numeracy, two of the fundamental recognized domains of early childhood development. 

Sprig’s holistic learning approach emphasizes early literacy and numeracy, to establish a robust learning foundation which highly correlates to increased student outcomes, greater attendance rates, and ultimately graduation. 

Besides focusing on the essentials of oral language and math, there are many other reasons why holistic learning strengthens early learning. 

One of the major reasons is holistic learning’s connection to differentiated instruction, which enables educators to personalize learning for every early child. Sprig’s holistic assessments help educators identify the unique strengths, needs and learning interests of every child. 

Here are 11 more reasons why holistic learning suits early learning so well.

 

Holistic Learning Does These 11 Things for Early Learning

Holistic Learning for Early Learning

Listed below are 11 qualities or characteristics of holistic learning that make it so conducive to foster growth and success in early learners. 

Sprig Learning elaborates on each reason, being the forerunner in the field of early holistic learning in education. 

Its program capabilities are cited to demonstrate how early learning is affected in each case.

 

1. Makes great academic gains by creating a school culture where students feel valued and where learning is experiential and engaging.

Experiential Learning

Like anyone else, early learners need connection. Young students who report a stronger sense of school belonging are more likely to hold higher education aspirations.

With Sprig, learning is a two-way dialogue. Learning activities in Sprig programs encourage students to experience the world and engage with their educators. 

When assessing students, it’s done by way of an engaging conversation that does not feel like a chore, or even a test. 

This comfortable learning environment helps early learners stay engaged in school.

 

2. Provides better learning opportunities for disadvantaged children to narrow the education opportunity gap.

Narrow Education Opportunity Gap

The loss of learning during the pandemic was most pronounced among socioeconomically disadvantaged students and schools.

Sprig Learning’s programs are designed to reduce both explicit and implicit bias that exists in early learning. There are many ways this can be accomplished, but two prominent ones are by the use of technology during assessments to limit potential human bias, and by creating culturally responsive educational materials.

Every early learner, irrespective of their background and circumstance, can benefit from a unique learning path suited to maximize their learning potential. 

 

3. Is designed for a full day of school.

Teacher Schedule

Full-day school and preschool programs are associated with greater gains in cognitive and social-emotional development and school readiness. 

Sprig Learning programs include preparation and collaboration time for teachers, learning blocks for literacy, math and other subjects, and end of the day dismissal. 

They fit seamlessly into the teacher’s schedule, which allows teachers to spend high-quality instructional time with early learners. 

 

4. Creates an authentic feedback loop with students, families and the community.

Feedback Loop

Due to the formative period of growth early learners go through, they require a high degree of collaboration from those around them, to ensure the right steps are taken in order for them to succeed.

It’s possible to increase participation in learning conversations in school by 40 percentage points and more, by reframing the relationship between teacher, student and parents as having shared accountability of student learning, regardless of their language background.

Sprig Learning programs allow educators to communicate with and receive feedback from the families and communities of students. 

 

5. Facilitates learning recovery for returning students.

Learning Recovery

The concept of learning recovery has become prominent due to the pandemic. 

Sprig programs were built to identify needs and address any learning loss that typically occurs during the summer. 

To help remedy this, Sprig’s holistic assessments gather new insights about students that are often overlooked and which may have changed during periods when learning loss is likely to have occurred. 

 

6. Addresses longstanding inequities in our education system.

Address Education Inequity

Holistic learning is a game changer. But it is also inclusive. If not, it would be one more wedge between the haves and have nots, leading to a disparity in education quality.

Since the beginning, Sprig aims to provide high-quality and equitable learning that reaches all students, regardless of their background.

This includes minority students, students from low-income families, Indigenous students, students with learning and thinking differences, and students whose first language is not English. 

 

7. Allows early learners to stay on track academically during difficult times.

Early Learning Stay Track Academically

Holistic learning is comprehensive in terms of what it measures. Educators and administrators are able to comb through relevant information to notice subtle warning signs. 

Especially in early learning, it’s important to look beyond yearly report cards. Other factors have to be considered, such as participation from the student, parent involvement, etc. All of these things contribute to academic achievement.

Sprig Learning will always provide up-to-date reports on students that show if they are performing below level, at level or above level.  

Teachers may adopt instruction and intervention strategies as necessary to help every young student improve.

 

8. Aligns instructional materials to standards in literacy, mathematics and social studies.

Align Instructional Material to Standards

Holistic learning is an approach to education that focuses on both the instruction and the content. 

Many communities across North America are revising their curricula to implement changes that are more reflective of the language, history and culture of communities. 

Sprig Learning’s programs are, or can be, aligned to the local curriculum.

 

9. Uses curriculum to reflect the experiences and interests of marginalized communities.

Holistic early learning curriculum

Holistic learning is aligned to a broad spectrum of curricula not out of necessity, but because of its inclusive nature. 

Sprig Learning’s programs affirm and develop students’ identities and empathy for others. They include a diverse set of authors and perspectives.

Young learners see themselves reflected in the textbooks, and are able to understand the rich and varied history of their communities. 

 

10. Creates affirming, student-centered learning experiences.

Student-centered learning experience

Holistic learning puts the student at the center, where they are immersed into a learning experience.  

Sprig Learning programs fuel creativity by building stories embedded with audio and visual components, supporting learning in the classroom, home and in the community.

They balance and enhance use of essential materials, activities and interactions to teach early learners. 

 

11. Ensures parental involvement.

Parental Involvement

Parents are perhaps the biggest ally in early childhood education outside of the school setting. Holistic learning always incorporates the viewpoints of parents.

With Sprig Learning, parents are able to do teacher recommended activities with their children at home. 

In non-affiliated Sprig schools, parents can still download the Sprig Home app and take an assessment to get recommended activities. 

They can earn badges together to work on weekly goals, and fit learning activities into their daily schedule. It is fun to observe the child’s learning tree grow as more activities are completed. 

 

 Holistic Learning — An Approach to Early Learning.

Holistic Learning- An Approach to Early Learning

It’s said that equity-focused school leaders consider alternative instructional approaches (such as culturally responsive teaching) to meet the learning needs of all students in the building, regardless of age or background.

Early learners are especially vulnerable as a lot hangs on their experience in the first few years of the school system.

High-quality early childhood education is more than an ideal, in fact National Association of Elementary School Principals (NAESP) call it an essential investment. 

It calls for a strengthening of the connections between early childhood programs, school districts and elementary schools that creates a continuum of high-quality learning for children. 

Holistic learning is one of the leading approaches that help school leaders to collaborate with childhood education providers, services providers, educators and families. 

We hope these 11 reasons demonstrate how holistic learning provides the knowledge and capacity to serve early learners.   

It allows for better pre-K to grade 3 alignment, and lets young students flourish in a system that is truly designed for them! 

If you have any questions about the application of holistic learning, please let us know

High-Performing School Improvement Plan [With 3 Actual Cases from Early Learning]

Sprig Learning designs high-quality and culturally enabling early literacy and numeracy programs for pre-K to Grade 3. 

High-quality early learning programs are used by school districts all over North America to produce meaningful results and deliver the best outcomes for young students.

The schools in these school districts listed here go above and beyond to meet their goals and objectives, and are thus categorized as high-performing schools. 

What sort of practices do these schools and school districts engage in?

 

Creating a School Improvement Plan That Will Be High-Performing

High-Performing School Improvement Plan

Those trusted with creating school improvement plans have a strong understanding of what’s at stake and the school’s current situation.

The basics are common knowledge to those involved in elementary-secondary education. 

Afterall, the key outcomes always support student achievement, education equity, attendance rates, graduation rates, etc.

The challenges are perennial in nature, and are both systemic (e.g., a lack of professional development) and operational (e.g., teacher recruitment and retention). 

It helps to look at actual case studies from early learning to appreciate the reality on the ground and inside the classroom. 

By observing these schools and districts, it’s possible to learn and take inspiration to solve similar challenges or implement a model or solution that best supports all students. 

Three case studies are examined below, each followed by a discussion.

 

1. Adding Instruction Time for All Students

Adding Instruction Time

Credit: Boston Public School YouTube Channel

​​Harvard-Kent Elementary School in Massachusetts, is a welcoming school in a very diverse community that includes multiple ethnicities and dual-language speakers. 

The school has a set of wonderful learning initiatives such as intervention blocks, which were added so teachers were able to implement trauma-sensitive practices that help students cope with socio-emotional difficulties. Compared to math, its literacy proficiency rate for students was relatively low.

To address this, it extended the learning time at school by 40 minutes in 2015 for those struggling with literacy, to help bolster their critical foundational skills. 

At the same time, students assessed at meeting literacy standards used the time for accelerated learning, strengthening their reading comprehension skills with access to complex texts.

The dedicated time for intervention ensured that personalized learning opportunities were maintained throughout all grades. Grade-level texts were coupled with grade-level tasks, with scaffolding for struggling learners and extension activities for those requiring additional challenges. 

The school also adopted an interest-based learning approach, where students were asked what they wanted to learn about. Lessons and units were adjusted with the students’ interest in mind. 

As a result of all these efforts, English proficiency skills nearly tripled between 2015 and 2019!

 

What Worked

Certainly, all high-quality early learning programs consider the length of instruction time into their planning. 

The more time teachers are able to spend directly with their students, the better the student outcomes usually are. 

It’s also interesting to note the inclusive approach where the extended learning time was for all students. Both texts and tasks could be modified to suit the level of every learner.  The focus was to  ensure every learner benefitted from this increment of instruction time. 

Sprig Learning has an intuitive platform that easily aligns to the various schedules of teachers, leaving room for more direct instruction time! Its holistic approach is also strength-based, akin to the model adopted by Harvard Kent school. 

To really ensure that all learning strengths are being identified, Spig helps schools to monitor students in different outcome categories that are mapped to the local curriculum. 

Dynamic storybooks are a part of its educational materials, and the level of difficulty of recommended activities are a key feature of both the oral language  and math platforms. 

 

2. Using the Right Frequency of Assessments

Right Frequency of Assessments

Credit: Google Earth

Cornell Elementary School in Des Moines, Iowa, faced the challenge of continually assessing new students who may or may not need extra support. 

To keep eyes on all students, it monitored progress in the core curriculum for new students in the district. 

They followed a three-tiered responsiveness-to-intervention model.

Kindergarteners’ initial sound fluency was assessed in the fall, and their phoneme segmentation fluency was assessed in the winter. 

For Grade1 students, nonsense word fluency was assessed in the fall, and oral reading fluency was assessed in the spring. 

Students scoring below benchmark levels were matched with the right type and intensity of instruction. Either they remained in the core curriculum with changes to instruction or received supplemental support. 

Examples of supplemental support included: more systematic instructional sequences, more precisely targeted instruction at the right level, and more opportunities for corrective feedback. 

The United States Department of Education listed Cornell Elementary School as one of the exemplary schools to implement the responsiveness to intervention model. In particular, its progress monitoring practice was praised as commendable. 

 

What Worked

Assessing for the core elements of early literacy and numeracy at different junctions throughout the year ensured that no student was left behind.

As soon as the problem area was identified, the right action could be taken at the right time.

It was important to ensure all students are successful throughout the core curriculum, but it was also helpful to have the checkpoints along the way to ensure the unique learning needs of each and every student were being met.

While the assessments were already in sequential order, students who needed more support, received more systematic instructional sequences. It was almost like the core curriculum was too rushed for them, and so they needed to master the basics first. 

Sprig Learning has a very similar approach with its early learning programs, where there are not only enough assessment opportunities in a holistic formative assessment model, but all the fundamental learning components are connected to the students’ strengths, needs and interests.  

When it is time to do the assessment, proficiency in newly learned concepts are measured, along with a host of other information, such as a change in the learning environment, learning strengths, learning styles etc. 

 

3. Packing High-Quality Learning Early On

High-Quality Early Learning

​​Credit: Jesse Costa/WBUR.org

Boston Public Schools (BPS) wanted to mitigate access and achievement gaps among students of various races, ethnicities and socio-economic backgrounds. 

To achieve this, it piloted a pre-K to Grade 3 initiative that included a new curriculum, a robust focus on vocabulary, differentiated instruction and professional development. 

More developmentally appropriate instructional materials were highlighted in all the early elementary grades. 

Storytelling was added to the preschool curriculum, and more student-centered instruction was incorporated into the grade 1 curriculum. 

Different learning activities, opportunities and lessons were provided to students matching their varied needs. For example, the same classroom activity could be worked on with visual aids or manipulatives or in smaller groups. 

Following the implementation of all these practices, a noticeable increase was observed in the students’ abilities to think critically and work collaboratively. 

The students were using a higher level of vocabulary compared to cohorts in previous years. 

 

What Worked

Using student-centered educational materials and curriculum as early as pre-K made a world of difference!

Personalization of education was introduced as early as grade 1, and existing instructional practices were bolstered by time-tested, high-quality early learning activities like storytelling. 

By raising the bar of high-quality early learning and making it readily available to every student walking through its doors, irrespective of their background, BPS was able to drive equity by closing the achievement gap. 

Sprig Learning is a big advocate of personalized instruction that is developmentally appropriate.

It has hundreds of learning activities in its early literacy program that support verbal communication skills such as storytelling. Similarly, it has numerous classroom and group activities that are designed to improve vocabulary.

The earlier the important language and cognitive concepts are grasped, the better it is for the student. 

There are few learning solutions out there that focus exclusively on early learning. Sprig is one of them. 

 

 High-Performing School. It’s Possible. 

High Performing School

​​The practices outlined in these three schools and districts outline how it’s possible to become a high-performing school district. 

High-performing schools and districts are able to surpass performance benchmarks and make a difference in the lives of educators, students and parents.

Everyone has a stake in the improvement of preschools and elementary schools in their locality. 

When writing the next school improvement plan, see how you can increase instructional time for students, have a systematic approach to assessment, and offer high-quality personalized learning materials in the earlier grades.

Sprig Learning can help you do all three. We are passionate about early education. To discuss more, give us a shout

Designing The Best Assessments in Early Childhood Education

In school districts across Canada and the US, there is a standardized assessment delivered at the end of grade 3 or grade 4 which often represents the first standardized assessment in the early years. 

It also often marks the end of the primary school years.

But in fact, a lot of the time, early childhood education begins with an assessment!

Sprig Learning designs holistic assessments and creates early learning resources that raise the quality of education in pre-K to 3. 

By holistically assessing every young student in the early stages of their education, it’s possible to gather the insights needed to improve student outcomes and enrich the learning experience for all students.

 

The Prevalence of the Early Childhood Assessment

Prevalence of Early Childhood Assessment

In this table from the Education Commission of the States, we see that not all states have mandatory kindergarten entrance assessments. 

The states that do mandate such assessments, have diagnostic screenings or readiness assessments that are either developed or approved by the department of education. 

35 out of the 37 states who use kindergarten entry assessments (KEA) say that the data gathered is used to inform instruction. 

The following details are provided for the recommended uses of KEAs.

  • Identify students in need of remediation, intervention and/or enrichment.
  • Develop a school readiness plan for each student.
  • Identify and provide intensive instruction to students with reading deficiencies.

That is the extent of specificity in detailing how the KEAs are to be used. 

As a result, according to the National Institute for Early Education Research, there are many educators who find these assessments “overly burdensome with inadequate content to successfully inform teaching”.

Early childhood assessments need to be easily administered to students and include high-quality content that informs classroom instruction. 

Content and structure are the themes of recommendations in the following sections.

 

Considerations in Early Childhood Assessment

Considerations in Early Childhood Assessment

​​The National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) says that “developmentally appropriate assessments can provide the information needed to strengthen high-quality early childhood programs and early elementary programming.”

NAEYC recommends that rather than early childhood assessments being used solely as screening tools, they should also be used to inform pre-K and kindergarten programs, curricula and individual instruction.

There is consensus that early childhood assessments should be conducted in a classroom setting. It should be conducted formatively, using everyday work and behaviour.

The Learning Policy Institute recommends that high-quality early childhood assessments:

  • measure essential domains of child development in ways that are developmentally appropriate and culturally relevant.
  • connect to formative assessment across preschool to grade 3.
  • have administration procedures that are fair for all children and practical for teachers.
  • yield results that are valid for all children being assessed.

 

On Content

Sprig Learning’s holistic assessments measure what early learners know, but more importantly the type of actionable information needed to differentiate instruction for students of different:

  • learning interests 
  • learning strengths
  • learning styles
  • backgrounds (cultural, socioeconomic, ethnic)

 

On Structure

Sprig Learning’s holistic assessments are delivered in a way that is playful and engaging for the student and easy to administer for educators – naturally aligning with classroom schedules.

In order to best assess early learners, the following things need to be considered: control (children led vs adult led), perspectives (one point of view vs multiple points of view), frequency (once vs ongoing) and timeline (diagnostic vs standardized). 

Sprig Learning’s holistic assessments are led by educators, take multiple perspectives into account to gain a comprehensive understanding of the student’s learning, happen multiple times in a year, and are used to inform classroom instruction.

Both diagnostic assessments and subsequent formative assessments are included in its holistic formative assessment structure.

 

Types of Early Childhood Assessment

Types of Early Childhood Assessment

Which types of assessment are ideally suited for early learning? 

To answer this question, it’s best to look at the recommendations provided by early childhood education institutes mentioned above, but also evaluate all the different types of assessments that exist.

In early learning, assessments can be conducted through:

 

Diagnostic Screenings: assesses the current situation and benchmark performance.

Observations: where educators keep note of the developmental progress of young students.

Portfolios: which store all the work early learners produce over a period of time.

Rubrics: helps teachers and/or parents evaluate the acquired understanding of important learning concepts.

 

Holistic learning incorporates all four. 

Educators bear some responsibility in helping students make sense of their worlds. Understanding the whole child leads to quality in education.

Holistic assessments diagnose all aspects of the child’s development – emotional, physical, spiritual and intellectual.

Based on this holistic understanding of a child’s needs, strengths and interests, learning activities are recommended to the student, which are completed and modified throughout the school year.

All of this work is monitored on student portfolios. Educators and parents are able to keep tabs on each student by observing their progress.

At any point of time, parents and other caregivers are able to support complementary learning at home and provide information that will be essential in modifying instruction. 

In a holistic learning approach, educators are able to facilitate the strengths of the early learner, give them freedom to explore and learn on their own, but also gather information that is essential to understanding their learning needs. 

 

The Right Early Learning Assessment

The Right Early Learning Assessment

In summary, with increased accountability in public education, early childhood educators have to use assessments to: 

  1. Identify students’ learning needs
  2. Guide instruction
  3. Measure student growth towards academic standards

In many states in the US and provinces across Canada, kindergarten is not mandatory. 

But in places where it is mandatory, high-quality early learning has a tremendous impact on learning, of which effective early years assessments play a vital role.

Over 70% of school leaders say that technology plays an integral role and is important in realizing wider strategic priorities. There are so many recommendations to cover when deciding the right assessment tool. Some of these suggestions are best applied by leveraging technology. 

Integrating holistic assessment practices in the early years has shown to increase student learning outcomes. 

To learn more about how holistic assessments can be used to assess early learners, please get in touch with us. 

 

What Can Sprig Learning Do for You?

Sprig Learning has a new video on its homepage!

Watch it here. Get a glimpse at a holistic early learning platform. 

Sprig Learning creates holistic early literacy and numeracy programs to provide every child a fair shot at success.

Whether you are a parent, a teacher, principal, a school district or community leader, an education innovator, or perhaps all of the above, Sprig’s products are designed to help everyone involved in early childhood education. 

When early learners succeed, everybody wins!

 

Everyone Wins

Sprig Learning is a purpose-built company with a mission to improve student success. As the main focus is on students, everyone ultimately wins!

Sprig Learning means so many things to so many people. 

We break it down in the following sections, how Sprig’s programs impact everyone involved in early childhood education. 

 

How Students Win

How Students Win

Students win because Sprig programs work on the critical early literacy and numeracy skills needed to unlock the greatest learning opportunities. 

Early on in their formative years, Sprig’s Language and Math programs focus on the early literacy and numeracy skills that are fundamental for all students, and critical for those that need it most.  

Sprig takes a proactive, strength-based approach that is inclusive for all types of learners in the classroom. 

Sprig’s holistic approach to assessment uncovers new insights that help teachers identify and build on the learning strengths of students to address their unique needs and gaps.

The innovative approach aims to mitigate implicit biases during the assessment process, through a 1-on-1 engaging conversation between the student, teacher, and a puppet! 

For students who often don’t see themselves or their culture reflected in the curriculum, Sprig develops culturally responsive educational materials that reflect unique languages, cultures and customs.

 

How School Leaders Win

How School Leaders Win

School leaders win because they are able to provide their schools with leading-edge, instructional curriculum, resources and technology, by working with Sprig.

Sprig’s early literacy and numeracy programs enhance instruction, align to local curriculum, and act as an innovative resource for educators to more efficiently manage their classrooms. 

Data is critical to making the right decisions and there is a transformation happening. There is a movement for increased data transparency that helps develop a comprehensive understanding of student performance and identify personalized connections to the curriculum in order to make a meaningful difference in their learning.

Sprig Learning creates learning profiles for every learner that are dynamically updated and monitored. Timely data analytics support education leaders and teachers to target those students in need and connect them with the right instruction, at the right time, and at the right level and intensity.

All students reach the foundational early learning milestones and become well prepared for the transitions to later grades where there are tougher standards. Ultimately, the schools and school districts are able to demonstrate ongoing growth in student achievement.

The implementation of such a proactive and inclusive literacy program, like Sprig Language for 3-6-year-olds, brings downstream cost savings to school districts by limiting the need for costly,  targeted reading interventions or reading recovery programs in the later grades.

 

How Teachers Win

How Teachers Win

​​Teachers win because Sprig Learning’s tools enhance their ability to efficiently manage a classroom full of diverse learners.

Sprig Learning makes it easy to differentiate instruction for students using technology, classroom resources and hands-on activities.

Educators are able to maintain and assess digital portfolios of their students which include information about their learning needs, strengths, and interests. 

This information is gathered from a holistic assessment conducted at the beginning of the school year, which is an integral part of the program. 

Sprig’s AI Engine combines and analyzes assessment data, not just from the student’s perspective, but also from the perspective of teachers, family members and other members of the community who supports a child’s learning.

With an insights-rich learning profile and a comprehensive view of each student, Sprig’s AI Engine supports teachers to fully personalize a learning pathway for every student and improve proficiency in both early literacy and math

Sprig also provides teachers with a host of physical and digital classroom materials. Many of these resources such as storybooks, language development cards and puppets are available for purchase at the Sprig Store

 

 How Parents Win

How Parents Win

​​Parents win because Sprig helps every caregiver contribute to the success of their child by supporting their learning at home. 

Sprig provides parents with online and mobile access to at-home learning activities that are personalized for their child. These activities are recommended by their teacher and designed to improve early literacy and numeracy outcomes while fitting into the everyday lives of parents.

Solid fundamentals are the basis of lifelong learning. With Sprig Learning, parents enjoy the ability to be more actively involved in their child’s education.

In schools using a Sprig program, parents and caregivers are able to participate in the assessment process through surveys that help understand a child’s access to learning outside of the classroom. It is a part of the holistic assessment process mentioned earlier. 

But even if your child’s school does have a Sprig program in their classroom, parents can sign up and access hundreds of targeted early learning activities through Sprig Home.

 

Let’s Talk

Let's Talk

Sprig Learning is an organization like no other. With Sprig, you can:

  • Access early learning resources intentionally designed to help students meet and exceed developmental milestones.
  • Understand the diverse learning needs of all students through holistic, formative assessments that combine hundreds of data points.
  • Meaningfully engage with the student, the parent, or with any other caregiver who has a role to play in the child’s education.
  • Personalize the student’s learning journey—not only through differentiated instruction, but through culturally enabling learning materials, which reflect the diverse languages and cultures of students across North America.

No other learning platform allows you to understand, access, engage and personalize quite the way Sprig does. 

At the end of the day, it’s important to broaden educators’ toolkits and provide equitable access to high-quality learning for all students. Sprig designs programs that do just that—so everybody wins! 

Have any questions? Please let us know here, and we can set up a time to discuss. 

 

 

Holistic Learning in Alberta (AB)

The Ministry of Education in Alberta is taking any potential learning gaps or opportunities very seriously because of the learning interruptions caused by the pandemic. To this effect, it has created voluntary one-on-one assessments that are four to six minutes long for grades 1 to 3.

Such assessments early on help to identify any potential stumbling blocks that could be a hindrance to literacy and numeracy development. For holistic early learning programs, it’s important that any insights related to the developmental domains are collected early. It allows educators to plan ahead and decide on the most important learning areas that need to be addressed.

 

2023-2024 Education Budget Announcement

The Alberta education budget proposal of $8.8 billion entails an increase in the base operating grant for each school authority, as well as a 10% increment of the grant intended to support students with distinct requirements, such as those with disabilities or who are English language learners.

Furthermore, an additional $42 million per year has been allocated province-wide to assist schools in managing classes that encompass students with increasingly diverse needs.

Alberta’s government has pledged to ensure that every Grade 1 student in the province acquires the foundational skills necessary to succeed in subsequent grades. 

To this end, the government has allocated an extra $10 million this year, aimed at assisting Grade 1 students who require additional support in foundational math and literacy to catch up to the expected grade level.

 

Holistic Early Learning

Alberta’s early learning curriculum framework, called Flight, articulates a set of holistic play-based goals for children’s learning. 

The goals are designed to nurture early learners’ confidence in communication and literacy, by providing opportunities to express and develop ideas with others using multiple representational languages. 

The framework also supports the children’s disposition to learn, by appreciating and nurturing the unique identity of each child as an early learner. 

The family is involved as a partner in building and strengthening the early childhood education community.

Educators design a responsive learning environment, where early learners can use multimodal literacies for exploration and expression.

Educational resources such as blocks, art materials, picture books and story play are all used to construct and represent knowledge.

 

Mandatory kindergarten?

No

 

Early Childhood Education Announcement

Alberta Education directed an additional $40 million to improve and expand learning assistance to early learners with disabilities and language delays. 

This extension of support includes the following:  

Guidance to school authorities to appropriately identify children for funding purposes. 

Increasing hours for parent and child engagement sessions.

Supporting children with moderate language delays. Previously, it was only for severe language delays.