4th-Grade Slump: Too Much Pressure on Kids?
In the pressure-cooker world of the nation's
elementary schools, it's hard to be 9 years
old.
By Peg Tyre and Karen Springen, Newsweek
Terri Bollinger, principal at the Ridge Central
elementary school, has noticed a troubling trend. Her third
graders are doing incredibly well. Most of them meet or
exceed Illinois state reading standards. But her fifth
graders aren't showing the same kind of improvement-and in
2005, their reading scores even dropped a little. Bollinger
thinks she knows why. For complicated reasons, some kids
lose their mojo when they get to fourth grade.
Principals
and teachers around the country are growing increasingly
concerned with what they call the fourth-grade slump. The
malaise, which can strike children any time between the end
of the second and the middle of fifth grade, is marked by a
declining interest in reading and a gradual disengagement
from school. What's causing it? Some say fourth graders get
distracted by videogames, organized sports and after-school
activities. Others worry that kids are burning out. No Child
Left Behind has created an intense push to teach kids the
fundamentals of reading. "We kill them with tests in third
grade. By fourth grade, they're tired," says Gina Defalco, a
fourth-grade teacher in Fredericksburg, Va. The slump was
first noted in the 1960s, but with schools under pressure to
show that kids in all grades are improving, administrators
are taking a fresh look at the problem.
For a lot of kids, fourth grade is a turning point.
According to the National Assessment of Education Progress,
known as the Nation's Report Card, American kids' reading
scores are improving in the early years of elementary
school. After fourth grade, test scores are flat. "While
there's no question schools are doing better with young
children," says Timothy Shanahan, president of the
International Reading Association, "kids just don't continue
to make the same gains." Kids read less as they get older,
too. In a 2006 survey by Scholastic Inc., 40 percent of kids
between the ages of 5 and 8 read every day. At fourth grade,
though, that rate declined to 29 percent.
Testing may be contributing to the slump in subtle,
curricular ways. At every level of schooling, says Jeffrey
Wilhelm, a reading expert from Boise State University, "kids
need to use a wide range of reading materials-nonfiction and
expository writing-and lots of vocabulary words." But in an
effort to "teach to the test," many schools are replacing
social studies and science with reading instruction in the
early years, and that hurts kids. Without this critical
base, many kids aren't equipped to do the abstract thinking
and learning required of them as they move on.
Maturity
can be an issue, too. Between third and fourth grade, kids
go from learning to read to reading to learn. Textbooks get
more difficult-instead of reading about Dot and Spot, fourth
graders read about the solar system. To keep up, 9-year-olds
have to be able to decode words, comprehend sentences and
make inferences about what paragraphs mean. If they can't,
they get frustrated fast. Elise Holston, principal of the
Kempton Elementary School in Spring Valley, Calif., found
that her school's fourth-grade slump started in third grade.
On statewide tests, 26 percent of Kempton's second graders
were proficient or advanced in reading. A year later, that
rate dropped to 15 percent. So this year, Holston's third
and fourth graders adopted a new reading program. Kids learn
about the Everglades from a textbook, but there's also a
short video so kids who were struggling can keep up.
Back at Ridge Central, Bollinger has her own
slump-busting strategy, and it looks a little like a bribe.
Six hundred minutes of reading equals a free trip to a local
amusement park. It was an offer that fourth grader Brian
Widmer couldn't refuse. He still loves computers and hockey,
but he's recently discovered the joys of the "Captain
Underpants" books. "It gave him motivation," says mom
Lesley. Just enough, she hopes, to get him on his way.
URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17083398/site/newsweek/page/2/
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