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Preschool to School Transition

Preschool to School Transition

Children who turn five years old on or before August 1, will be eligible for kindergarten. If your child turns five years old between August 1, and September 15, they may be eligible for kindergarten enrollment.  Please contact us if you have any questions.

As the Preschool Liaisons, our goal is to develop a successful preschool to school transition program in accordance with district policies and procedures that meet the needs of our incoming kindergarten students and families. The preschool to school transition is a process involving communication and partnerships among school, community agencies, families, and local preschool/childcare settings. It takes us all working together to prepare our children for school. Please contact us if you have any questions about kindergarten transition, concerns about child development and readiness skills.

A colorful tree made of handprints represents the Preschool to School Transition Team.

 

Brent Young at 307-771-2186 or ext 10507 Please contact us with any questions.

Act Early on developmental concerns to make a big difference for you and your child.

  • Children who turn five years old on or before August 1, will be eligible for kindergarten. If your child turns five years old between August 1, and September 15, they may be eligible for kindergarten enrollment.  Please contact us if you have any questions.

    As the Preschool Liaisons, our goal is to develop a successful preschool to school transition program in accordance with district policies and procedures that meet the needs of our incoming kindergarten students and families. The preschool to school transition is a process involving communication and partnerships among school, community agencies, families, and local preschool/childcare settings. It takes us all working together to prepare our children for school. Please contact us if you have any questions about kindergarten transition, concerns about child development and readiness skills.

  • A colorful tree made of handprints represents the Preschool to School Transition Team.

     

    Brent Young at 307-771-2186 or ext 10507 Please contact us with any questions.

    Act Early on developmental concerns to make a big difference for you and your child.

  • A young child smiling and holding a kindergarten learning kit while standing in a school hallway.
  • An adult and two children standing outside a building, with one child holding a kindergarten learning kit.
  • A young child smiling indoors while holding a kindergarten learning kit by the handle.
  • A child and an adult standing in a school hallway, with the child holding a kindergarten learning kit.
  • Three adults wearing masks standing indoors, each holding a purple bag with a school logo.

A smooth transition into kindergarten leads to better school success both during the transition year and later throughout the student’s academic life.

  • Speech Language Parent Night Participant

    "It was a great night. Good information and ideas, many questions have been answered."
  • Wyoming Department of Education

    Successful coordination between preschool and kindergarten helps lay the groundwork for a child’s positive school experience.
  • Parent Advocate

    "I have worked with this family for a while, and they were so nervous about their child going to kindergarten. The parents said they were so thankful for the Preschool to School Transition Team and the help you provided to the family during the transition process".
  • Parent

    "Thank you all for everything and helping make this PreK year possible for my son."
  • Atchison and Pompellia

    These early years are the cornerstone for effective transition into the educational continuum and the foundation upon which future learning is built and fostered.

Family and Child Resources

  • Several boxes labeled 'Be Ready for Kindergarten' are stacked on a surface.

    The Preschool to School Transition Team received a grant through the Wyoming Department of Education to support and engage families in kindergarten transition activities. As part of the transition activities planned this year, we were able to purchase Kindergarten Readiness Kits.  Kits are available to children coming to school in the fall, one kit per child. If you are interested in receiving a kit, please call 771-2186.  Limited number of kits are available.

  • Text on a dark background reads 'Prekindergarten Programs'.

Kindergarten Curriculum

Kindergarten in Laramie County School District #1: An overview of what your child will be learning in kindergarten.

  • Kindergarten students are focused on developing the foundational skills of literacy. This includes learning the alphabet sounds and letters and how they relate to reading and writing. Students will practice rhyming, beginning sounds, and blending sounds into words. Students will also begin to learn how to read and comprehend simple texts over the course of the year while being encouraged to write in various ways. They will practice drawing and writing letters in order to share ideas and information. Students will be developing vocabulary through exposure to books, stories, and speaking. They will also begin to practice their listening and speaking skills while being introduced to various strategies.

  • The Kindergarten curriculum will focus on the following themes:

    • Quarter 1 – Artist as Explorer
    • Quarter 2 – Artist as Collaborator
    • Quarter 3 – Artist as Storyteller
    • Quarter 4 – Artist as Observer
  • The focus of kindergarten social studies is the individual so students will be asked to relate information to their lives. Social studies content and concepts are integrated into lessons throughout the day. Benchmarks from each of the six social studies standards will be addressed throughout the year via different lessons and activities.

  • Students receive a minimum of 60 minutes of instruction weekly in Music provided by a Specialist certified in Music Education. The focus is on exploration, movement, listening skills, music creation and immersion. During a typical lesson the child will engage in Singing, Dancing, Active Listening, Rhythmic Movement and Steady Beat activities.

  • Kindergartners will be able to answer questions such as:

    • What happens if you push or pull an object harder?

    • Where do animals live and why do they live there?

    • What is the weather like today and how is different from yesterday?
       

    Kindergartners will also develop an understanding of patterns and variations in local weather, the importance of weather forecasting, and how to prepare for and respond to severe weather. Students will apply their understanding of the effects of different strengths and directions of pushes and pulls on the motion of an object in order to design a solution to a simple problem. Lastly, they will understand what plants, animals, and humans need to survive and how where they live affects some of their needs.

  • The Kindergarten Physical Education programs consist of basic movement skills, essential knowledge and understanding of physical activity and fitness, as well as personal and social behavior are introduced at the kindergarten-second grade span. Students can learn in a developmentally appropriate program, are provided meaningful content and instruction in a variety of motor skills, rhythms activities, and fitness education. Appropriate instruction with maximum practice opportunities and full inclusion is also provided. Student assessment is ongoing, and assessments are aligned with the Wyoming Physical Education Content and Performance Standards.

  • During the course of the Kindergarten math curriculum in LCSD#1, students will learn the following skills:

    • Know number names and the count sequence
    • Count to tell the number of objects
    • Write numbers 0 to 20, and represent objects with a written number
    • Compare numbers between 1 and 10 when written
    • Understand addition as putting together, and understand subtraction as taking away
    • Fluently add with sums equal to 5 or less
    • Fluently subtract with differences equal to 5 or less
    • Work with numbers 11 - 19 to begin learning place value
    • Describe and compare measurable attributes of objects
    • Classify objects and count the number of objects in a category
    • Identify and describe shapes
      • Analyze, compare, create, and compose shapes
    • Adapted from CCSS Mathematics Standards
  • The purpose of Health Education is to motivate students to maintain and improve their health, prevent disease, avoid and reduce health – related risk behaviors and provide students with knowledge and skills to lead a healthy lifestyle. More than ever before, it is vital that schools provide students with experiences that enable them to develop the capacity to obtain, interpret, and understand basic health information and services and the competence to use such information and services in ways that enhance their health and reduce their health risks. In other words, schools should help students become health literate. The Wyoming Content and Performance Standards are based on the premise that health literacy is the key outcome of school health education. Health literacy is an asset to be achieved and students must be empowered to apply their knowledge and skills in ways that enable them to exert greater control over their health and health-related decisions.

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