Little children are big news this week, as the White House holds a summit on early childhood education on Wednesday. The president wants every 4-year-old to go to preschool, but the new Congress is unlikely to foot that bill.

Since last year, more than 30 states have expanded access to preschool. But there's still a lack of evidence about exactly what kinds of interventions are most effective in those crucial early years.

In New York City, an ambitious, $25 million study is collecting evidence on the best way to raise outcomes for kids in poverty. Their hunch is that it may begin with math.

Time That Counts

"One! Two! Three! Four! Five!"

Gayle Conigliaro's preschool students are jumping as they count, to get the feeling of the numbers into their bodies — a concept called "embodied cognition."

P.S. 43 is located in Far Rockaway, Queens, just steps from the ocean. The area is still recovering from Hurricane Sandy. But now it's been chosen as one of 69 high-poverty sites around New York City for a research study to test whether stronger math teaching can make all the difference for young kids. The study is funded by the Robin Hood Foundation, which is dedicated to ending poverty in New York. Pamela Morris, with research group MDRC, is the lead investigator.

"MDRC and the Robin Hood Foundation developed a partnership really with a broad goal," she says, "which is, they want to change the trajectories of low-income children, and to do so by focusing on preschool."

There's plenty of evidence on the long-term importance of preschool. But why math? Morris says a 2013 study by Greg Duncan, at the University of California, Irvine's School of Education, showed that math knowledge at the beginning of elementary school was the single most powerful predictor determining whether a student would graduate from high school and attend college. "We think math might be sort of a lever to improve outcomes for kids longer term," Morris says.

But there's a real lack of math learning in pre-K. In one study, in fact, just 58 seconds out of a five-hour preschool day was spent on math activities. Part of the problem, says University of Denver professor Doug Clements, is that "most teachers, of course, have been through our United States mathematics education, so they tend to think of math as just skills. They tend to think of it as a quiet activity."

Clements is the creator of Building Blocks, the math curriculum being tested in this new study. Building Blocks is designed to be just the opposite: engaging, exciting and loud. "We want kids running around the classroom and bumping into mathematics at every turn."

At P.S. 43, math games, toys and activities are woven through the entire day. At transition time, the teacher asks the students to line up and touches their heads with the "counting wand." At circle time, fittingly, the children talk about shapes. Just a few months into the school year, they observe correctly that a geometric shape must be a "closed figure" and that a square is "a special rectangle."

"How do you know it's a circle?" asks the teacher. "Because it goes round and round," says one girl with a bear barrette in her hair.

When Ms. Conigliaro asks, "How do you know?" she's asking the kids to think about their own thinking. That's a skill called metacognition. Explaining your reasoning out loud also develops verbal ability.

At choice time, besides the play dough and pattern blocks, there are computer games matched to Building Blocks that keep track of each student's progress. And two children play a game called Number Match ("Is three more than two? How do you know?") as a teacher watches. The teacher is keeping notes of each child's level of understanding. The idea of developmental paths, or "trajectories of understanding," is a core concept in Building Blocks.

"There are reliable levels of thinking through which kids pass on their way to achieving a certain understanding in mathematics," Clements says. For example, children go from simply chanting "onetwothreefourfive," to separating out each number word, to associating a number word with a given amount, to knowing that when you stop counting, the last number tells you "how many."

Also in the classroom is a coach from Bank Street College of Education, who comes every other week to help the teacher put Building Blocks into practice. This is important to the study design. The coaches ensure that the curriculum is being implemented. Pamela Morris says, "Often we ask teachers what curriculum they're delivering, and we find it's a book on their bookshelf collecting dust."

The study will follow up with these students and a control group all the way through the third grade. They'll be directly assessing their math and reading abilities and looking at their grades and test scores later on. Morris is curious whether working on math will enhance the children's ability to self-regulate, inhibit impulses, pay attention appropriately and hold important concepts in working memory. This is a group of skills known as executive functioning. For example, if the teacher says "clap and count to five," will you be able to stop clapping before you get to six?

But Conigliaro, a 24-year veteran teacher, is already convinced of the value of this curriculum.

"I just feel like the 'aha' moment. This is what teaching should be. Where's the literacy program?" she says. "We would just like it to be a research-based program so we can give our kids the best." She says the kids' progress amazes her every day.

Copyright 2015 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Transcript

STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:

The White House holds a summit this week on early childhood education, and that brings to mind an eternal truth. Everybody is in favor of kids and education.

RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:

Well, let's be a little more precise. Everybody is in favor of platitudes about supporting kids and education.

INSKEEP: It's a bit trickier to define exactly what adults can do to help kids get ahead. And today, we report on a study that tries to identify that.

MONTAGNE: It's a nine-year study conducted in New York. The central question - what can you teach preschoolers that will make a difference when they're older?

INSKEEP: NPR's Anya Kamenetz reports the answer may be as simple as one two three.

(SOUNDBITE OF CHILDREN COUNTING)

UNIDENTIFIED CHILDREN: One. Two. Three. Four.

ANYA KAMENETZ, BYLINE: At PS 43 in Far Rockaway, Queens, 14 4-year-olds are using their whole bodies to count. This is a radical departure from how math is usually taught.

DOUG CLEMENTS: Most teachers, of course, have been through our United States mathematics education. So they tend to think of math as just skills. They tend to think of it as a quiet activity where you pull out paper, and you write all your facts down.

KAMENETZ: Doug Clements at the University of Denver is the creator of Building Blocks - the math curriculum at the heart of this new study. Building Blocks math, he says, is designed to be exciting, fun and loud.

(SOUNDBITE OF CLASSROOM)

UNIDENTIFIED CHILDREN: (Yelling) Rectangle.

GAYLE CONIGLIARO: It's a rectangle. It's not a square?

MULTIPLE UNIDENTIFIED CHILDREN: (Yelling) No. Rectangle.

CONIGLIARO: Aren't all rectangles squares?

UNIDENTIFIED CHILDREN: (Yelling) No.

CONIGLIARO: No, they're not?

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: A square is a special rectangle.

CONIGLIARO: That's terrific.

KAMENETZ: PS 43 is one of 69 low-income schools around New York City chosen for this randomized, controlled trial. Half will try Building Blocks, and the other half are a control group. The study is funded by the Robin Hood Foundation. They set out to find what interventions work best for pulling young children out of poverty.

Pamela Morris with research group MDRC is the study's lead investigator. She drew on new findings that say math knowledge at the beginning of elementary school is the single strongest predictor of whether a student will graduate high school.

PAMELA MORRIS: Children who do well in math in preschool do better not only in math but also in their reading skills later on such that math might be sort of a lever to improve outcomes for kids longer-term.

KAMENETZ: But, says Doug Clements, the designer of Building Blocks, there's a problem in pre-K.

CLEMENTS: How much time did the average kid spend on mathematics a day in a five-hour day? Fifty-eight seconds.

KAMENETZ: Not with Building Blocks. Here, kids encounter math games, computer programs, toys, activities.

CLEMENTS: We want kids running around the classroom and bumping into mathematics at every turn.

(SOUNDBITE OF MATH LESSON)

CONIGLIARO: If you think this is a shape, raise your hand and tell me its name. Caliegha (ph).

CALIEGHA: It's a circle.

CONIGLIARO: It is. How do you know it's a circle?

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: It goes around and around.

KAMENETZ: How do you know? When the teacher, Gayle Conigliaro, asks this, she's getting the kids to think about their own thinking. That's a skill called meta-cognition. Explaining your reasoning out loud also develops verbal ability.

(SOUNDBITE OF MATH LESSON)

CONIGLIARO: You know what? The rhombus...

UNIDENTIFIED CHILD: A trapezoid.

CONIGLIARO: You remembered so nicely. Good job. Give me a high-five. Nice work.

KAMENETZ: This $25-million study will follow the children all the way through third grade, looking for an impact on test scores and higher-order thinking skills. But Conigliaro, a 24-year veteran teacher, says she's already convinced.

CONIGLIARO: I just feel like the aha moment. This is what teaching should be. And we would just like it - be a research-based program - so that we can give our kids the best.

KAMENETZ: Just a few months into the school year, she says, the kids' progress amazes her every day. Anya Kamenetz, NPR News, New York. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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