Preschool program gets ready to grow
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Deirdre Newman
The district’s preschool at the Harper Education Center is gearing
up for a major expansion and change in its instruction that will
place it at the vanguard of preschool education in the state.
The site, which now serves about 60 special education students, is
preparing for an onslaught of new students next year. Thanks to a
state grant, the site will take on 240 mainstream preschoolers in
early February.
The addition will benefit both groups of students, as the site
will offer various instructional options including some “blended”
classrooms, where special ed students and their mainstream
counterparts will be integrated.
The district is the first in the county and one of the first in
the state to use the blending approach, said Lorie Hoggard, director
of early childhood education.
“The children will be much better prepared for kindergarten and
the experience that they’ll have with their peers,” Hoggard said.
The State Preschool Grant, which the district found out it
qualified for in August, provides funding for an extra 288
preschoolers. In addition to the 240 at the Harper Preschool, the
grant will also cover 48 preschoolers who are now at Wilson
Elementary School.
The Preschool Intervention Program for special education students
has been at the Harper site for the past three years, Hoggard said.
It serves students from age 3 until kindergarten who have been
diagnosed with conditions such as speech delay and autism.
The three options the expanded preschool will provide are: some
classrooms with only state preschool staff with a few special
education kids; some “blended” classrooms with a state preschool
teacher and a special education teacher with 14 mainstream kids and
up to six special education students; and classrooms with only a
special education teacher and all special education students.
This will allow the preschool to provide the best possible
environment for the special education students, Hoggard said.
“They will experience the typical preschool experience as much as
possible, infused with the right type of support to overcome any
barriers created by their disability,” Hoggard said.
The interaction between the two groups will be enhanced by reverse
mainstreaming -- having the mainstream students visit the special
education classrooms instead of the other way around, which is
typical in most elementary schools.
Preparing for the “blending” process is fostering a new spirit of
cooperation and teamwork among the preschool staff, said Gladys
Green, preschool co-director.
“We’re having to think outside of our little box,” Green said. “We
have a really good team of people committed to this project. And
we’re learning from each other.”
The “blending” philosophy is so cutting-edge that it enticed Cindy
Stewart to leave her position as assistant superintendent of the
Moreno Valley Unified School District to come to the preschool as
Green’s co-director.
“I wanted to work with the blended program, which is so innovative
it should have been done a long time ago,” Stewart said.
Preschool officials are even considering installing a two-way
mirror in one of the “blended” classrooms so it can be used as a
demonstration lab, Hoggard said.
Before any of the new students move in, though, there is a lot of
work to be done to the site, including applying fresh paint,
expanding the playground, supplying the classrooms with furniture and
materials and moving the preschool office to the front of the
building.
“I’m looking forward to that first day when the kids come off the
bus and see the beautiful environment here,” Green said.
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