David Boucher's kindergarten classroom was a cacophony of vowel recitations, rhyming words, vocabulary drills and sentence decoding.
It was Day 34 of school at Folwell School in Minneapolis. The little ones should be reading by June.
Memphis stumbled in her read-aloud turn when she reached the last word of the sentence, "The leaves are brown." With some coaching from Boucher, she proudly pronounced the color.
"I don't want to hear you say you can't do it when you can," Boucher said to her.
When the school year ends, his kindergartners should be reading sentences like "The duck went in the little house" — and doing other things that used to wait until first grade.
Across Minnesota, kindergarten has morphed from learning-while-playing into a grade that emphasizes reading earlier and counting higher. Boucher's Powderhorn-area school has an arts curriculum for kindergartners, for example. A school in the Hopkins district gives kids hands-on science exploration.
"Kindergarten is the new first grade, period," said Greta Callahan, who teaches kindergarten at Bethune Community School in north Minneapolis.
The new expectations find teachers straining to balance mounting standards for young learners while trying to keep activities developmentally appropriate. Play often falls by the wayside.