Title: Comparison of Half- and Full-Day Kindergarten on Kindergarten Achievement
1Comparison of Half- and Full-Day Kindergarten on
Kindergarten Achievement
Jack B. Monpas-Huber, Ph.D. Director of
Assessment and Student Information
2About this Study
- The purpose of these analyses is to examine the
effect of All Day kindergarten on the achievement
of Shoreline kindergarten students. This
requires two conditions - A longitudinal analysis of the same students over
period of time - A continuous measure of achievement to provide a
consistent yardstick for measuring growth
throughout the year - In Shoreline, the only districtwide measure of
kindergarten student achievement is the DIBELS
literacy measures, and the most recent
longitudinal data is from last school year,
2008-09. This study therefore compares the
achievement of 2008-09 Half Day and All Day
kindergarten students on the DIBELS measures. - Results are presented in two ways
- Gains in mean performance across benchmark
windows - Regression analyses of DIBELS outcome measures on
predictor measures of All Day kindergarten
participation, demographic variables (lunch,
gender, English speaking), and interactions
between All Day K and the demographic variables
3DIBELS Kindergarten Literacy Measures
4Effect of All-Day Kindergarten on Literacy DIBELS
Initial Sound Fluency
Means
Both Half Day and All Day students gained. All
Day students gained at a slightly faster rate
than Half Day students.
Winter benchmark score
5Effect of All-Day Kindergarten on Literacy DIBELS
Letter Naming Fluency
Spring benchmark score
Winter benchmark score
Fall benchmark score
6Effect of All-Day Kindergarten on Literacy DIBELS
Phoneme Segmentation Fluency
Spring benchmark score
Winter benchmark score
7Effect of All-Day Kindergarten on Literacy DIBELS
Nonsense Word Fluency
Spring benchmark score
Winter benchmark score
8Effect of All-Day Kindergarten on Literacy DIBELS
Initial Sound Fluency
What predicts the winter ISF score? Presented
here is regression of winter ISF on fall ISF and
other predictor variables including All Day K.
The purpose is to gather evidence of the net
impact of All Day K on literacy achievement
controlling for other demographic variables which
also influence student achievement. The only
significant predictors are the Fall ISF score and
gender. Students score an average of .72 points
higher on the Winter Assessment, and boys, on
average, score 4.4 points lower than girls on the
winter ISF measure, accounting for All Day K,
family income status, and language of origin.
All Day K students do not score significantly
different than Half Day students.
9Effect of All-Day Kindergarten on Literacy DIBELS
Letter Naming Fluency
A regression of Spring Letter Naming Fluency
scores on the fall and winter scores, All Day K,
demographics, and their interactions. The only
significant predictors are the winter LNF score
and the interaction between All Day K and
Non-English. The results suggest that
Non-English speakers who were in All Day K
scored, on average, 6.8 points higher on the
Spring LNF measure than all other students.
10Effect of All-Day Kindergarten on Literacy DIBELS
Letter Naming Fluency
11Effect of All-Day Kindergarten on Literacy DIBELS
Phoneme Segmentation Fluency
Regression of Spring PSF score on Winter PSF, All
Day K, demographics, and interaction terms. The
only significant predictor is Winter PSF score.
Participation in All Day K, or membership in any
particular demographic group, does not
significantly improve prediction of the Spring
PSF score over the mean.
12Effect of All-Day Kindergarten on Literacy DIBELS
Nonsense Word Fluency
Regression of Spring NWF score on Winter NWF, All
Day K, demographics, and interaction terms. The
interaction between All Day K and lunch service
is significant, suggesting that low income
students in All Day K scored, on average, 10
points lower than all other students.
13Effect of All-Day Kindergarten on Literacy DIBELS
Nonsense Word Fluency