A nursery school or preschool is a school for the education of very young children (generally five years of age and younger). These schools range from schools which seek to teach young children to schools which only provide childcare with little educational benefits. Schools which focus on education generally teach early social skills including interpersonal interaction, being a part of a group of peers, and classroom skills such as following the instructions of a teacher. Some formal education also takes place, such as early reading or language skills. Some nursery schools have adopted specialized methods of teaching, such as Montessori, High Scope, Reggio Emilia approach, Bank Street and various other pedagogy.
In the United States most preschool advocates support the National Association for the Education of Young Children's Developmentally Appropriate Practices.
The goal of Head Start and Early Head Start is to increase the school readiness of young children in low income families. These programs serve children from birth to age 5, pregnant women, and their families.
Head Start was started by the Federal Government in 1964 to help meet the needs of disadvantaged preschool children. A panel of child development experts drew up this program at the request of the Federal Government, and the program became what is Project Head Start.
The office of Economic Opportunity launched Project Head Start as an 8 week summer program in 1965. The project was designed to help end poverty by providing preschool children (age 3 to school entry age) in low-income families with a program that would meet emotional, social, health, nutritional, and psychological needs.
Head Start was then transferred to the Office of Child Development in the US Department of Health, Education, and Welfare in 1969. Today it is a program within the Administration on Children, Youth and Families in the Department of Health and Human Services. Programs get administered locally by school systems and non-profit organizations.
Pre-kindergarten is an educational experience, while child care tends to be caregiving so that both parents can work (one parent in a single parent head of household). However, good child-care programs can be just like a prekindergarten class, as long as there are experienced, well-educated teachers who promote children's cognitive and social development. State-funded pre-kindergarten programs have set standards and are able to provide the necessary resources to ensure that every student is offered a high-quality learning environment that prepares a child for further schooling.
Good pre-kindergarten programs instruct children in different skill areas that they will need in further schooling. Such skill areas include: learning to read, to do math, to progress in science, and to understand the world and how it works. Through pre-kindergarten programs, children are able to become familiar with books, words, language use, numbers and problem solving, as well as important social skills for classrooms (paying attention and peer relationships).
Child care | School types | Educational stages
Kinderkrippe | Bebovartejo | École maternelle en France | 保育所 | Peuterspeelzaal | Educação Infantil
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