Connecticut has fundamentally changed how it decides when a child is old enough for school. Under the updated Connecticut Kindergarten cutoff law (Public Act 26-1), the state is phasing out the early-admission waiver process. By July 2027, public school children must be five years old by September 1. No exceptions.
For families with children born in September, October, November, or December, this shift means an extra year of waiting before entering public school, regardless of whether a child is socially, emotionally, or academically prepared.
At The Country School, a premier private school in Madison, CT, we believe readiness shouldn't be defined by a date on a calendar. As an independent school, we set our own independent school Kindergarten age requirements. We are not bound by the state’s September 1 cutoff. Instead, we evaluate Kindergarten readiness in Connecticut the way it should be decided: by looking at the individual child.
"A birthday is arbitrary; it tells us nothing about whether a child is ready for Kindergarten," says Admission Director Pam Glasser. "That's not what we assess. We assess the child in front of us. That's the distinct advantage of our independent school. We don’t force students into a rigid system. We build a world for each student, so they can take on the world."
The 4 Pillars of Kindergarten Readiness
So, what does readiness actually look like in our PreK program in Connecticut? We evaluate four developmental pillars, none of which is determined by a birth certificate:
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Academic Foundation: We look for early letter recognition, emerging phonics, intuitive number sense, and the fine motor control required to hold a pencil and write with intention.
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Social-Emotional Growth: Utilizing the Responsive Classroom approach, we teach children how to resolve peer conflicts, share, take turns, and navigate big feelings with growing autonomy.
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Independence: Children practice following multi-step directions, managing their personal belongings, and transitioning smoothly between activities without needing constant adult intervention.
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Physical & Mental Stamina: We assess a child's ability to stay focused and actively engaged throughout a full school day without running out of steam halfway through.
A child who exhibits these four traits is ready for Kindergarten. A child who is still developing them won't suddenly become "ready" just by turning five on a specific date, nor are they held back if they miss an arbitrary state deadline.
A School Built Around Your Child, Not a Calendar
Because we set our own criteria, deciding when your child begins Kindergarten becomes a collaborative partnership between your family and our educators. It is not a mandate handed down from the state.
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If your child is ready to soar in September, we are ready for them.
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If your child needs an extra year to build a stronger foundation, our PreKindergarten program will ensure they get exactly what they need to be successful the following year in Kindergarten.
That is the difference between a system built around a strict calendar and a school built entirely around the child.
Take the Next Step with Us
If you have questions about your child's developmental timeline or how the new state law affects your family, we are here to help.
Schedule a
private tour or join us for our next Open House to experience the Country School difference firsthand.