MIDDLEBURGH - In a perfect educational world, all young students would come into kindergarten completely ready to start their school career. The truth is, students come to school with different stages of readiness with many of them with poor skill sets.
Middleburgh Central School officials recognize this and are hoping to even this playing field so students succeed in their educational careers.
MCS officials had been looking at a multiage class structure but have now shifted their focus toward student readiness.
The core idea, said Superintendent Mark Place, is that "students arrive in kindergarten with very different starting points, and our job is to ensure every child builds the foundational skills they need before academic demands ramp up."
He continued, "in the primary grades, the most important skill is reading—because when reading becomes fluent and automatic, students can access learning in every subject. The key milestone is the shift from 'learning to read' to 'reading to learn,' which needs to happen by third grade to support long-term success."
What officials mean by “ready”: "When we say a child is 'ready,' we mean they have the foundational skills—and the confidence—to succeed with the next level of learning without needing constant intensive support. In the primary grades, that most often means they can read accurately and understand what they read well enough to learn from grade-level materials," Mr. Place said.
By the third grade students who are below grade level in reading, rarely catch up, officials said. Students who struggle with reading struggle across-the-board in all subject areas. Despite that result, as a general practice, districts move students up through the system based on age, even when they know they are not ready.
"Small early differences don’t stay small," Mr. Place said. "When students aren’t strong readers by third grade, it becomes much harder to catch up—and those struggles often show up across the board (math, science, social studies, etc.) because so much learning depends on reading and vocabulary."
What MCS is changing and what they are not:
* Based on teacher feedback, they are moving away from the multiage structure because it required more curriculum redesign and planning time than was sustainable.
* They are keeping the parts that are helping students: flexible student grouping, push-in support from reading specialists, and strong collaboration and planning time.
* Moving forward, they are "doubling down" on readiness—meaning progress will be guided by skill development, not just age or grade-level timelines.
"This is not about holding children back," Mr. Place said. "It’s about ensuring primary students get the time and support they need to build a strong foundation so they can move forward with confidence and success.
"In some cases, a student may benefit from a transitional “readiness year” (extra support and time) before moving to the next set of expectations—but the focus is always forward progress and skill growth."
The following will remain in place: push-in support, shared teacher, planning time, and flexible student grouping.
The work ahead will be difficult, Mr. Place said.
"It will include assessing each students readiness with continuous meetings with teachers and messaging to parents."