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Consider this a head’s up: This week’s newsletter is about poop.

Specifically, potty training.

In January, Utah Rep. Doug Welton introduced a bill that would require kindergarten students be potty trained before parents enroll them in school. Children who aren’t potty trained would be referred to a social worker or counselor.

Potty training — or the lack of it — clearly strikes a nerve with teachers.

“The fastest and number 1 way to get parents to potty train their kids at home is to call them to the school every time the child needs a diaper to be changed,” said a self-identified kindergarten teacher in one potty-training focused Reddit thread.

“My friend just started teaching kindergarten and says she has at least 1 in a diaper and probably another 2 in pull ups. I cannot fathom this,” said a daycare teacher in another Reddit thread that drew more than 1,000 comments.

So, are more children coming to school in diapers?

It’s a difficult question to answer, in part because it’s not data that is tracked, and also because there aren’t a lot of recent studies on potty training and the average age of children who master it. In the 1940s, toilet training generally started before children were 18 months old, according to an article in the magazine American Family Physician. Around 60 years later, in the mid-2000s, the same article said parents were generally starting toilet training when a child was 21 to 36 months old.

Those numbers haven’t significantly changed in the last couple of decades, according to Dr. Ari Brown, a member of the American Academy of Pediatrics and a pediatrician of 28 years, based out of Austin, Texas. Typically developing children will be day trained between ages 2 to 3 1/2, and night-time training can take a few years longer, she said.

By 5, most children know how to use the bathroom. But having an accident at that age isn’t uncommon, and there are plenty of medical and behavioral reasons for these mishaps that have nothing to do with knowing how to use a toilet, Brown said. They can include physical complaints like constipation, fear of loud auto-flushing toilets, anxiety about large, crowded school bathrooms, or worry about asking a teacher for permission to leave.

“This is not a ‘toilet training’ issue and it should not preclude a child from attending school,” Brown said.

Although the legislation proposed in Utah allows for exceptions among students with a documented disability, Brown said medical issues like constipation might not show up on an individualized education program.

The Utah Department of Education does not track bathroom incidents in classrooms, and several local districts said they also have no data on this. The communications director for Alpine School District, the largest school system in Utah, said potty training incidents in the classroom is “not a trend that has surfaced as a concern (knock on wood).”

A communications administrator for the Nebo School District — located in an area represented by the bill’s sponsor — echoed that sentiment. “According to the teachers we have heard from, the rates are the same as they have always been, and there has not been a noticeable change,” he said.

But state leaders have heard otherwise.

Christine Elegante, a K-3 literacy specialist with the Utah Department of Education, said she heard from school districts that potty training kindergarteners was not a concern.

But she heard a different story when she had a statewide meeting with kindergarten program leaders.

“I was really taken aback by how many said that it was a problem, that they were seeing more and more kids that did not have the skillset they needed to be able to toilet themselves. If they had an accident, they weren’t capable of changing themselves,” Elegante said. “It was a bigger, more widespread problem that we hadn’t really heard of.”

After that meeting, Elegante said she heard from more elementary school principals who reported that potty training has become a bigger problem in kindergarten classrooms since the pandemic, particularly during this school year.

Elegante doesn’t know why students might be struggling with potty training more this year than any other, but she said schools have increased the number of full-day kindergarten classes they offer starting this year. Last year, 46 percent of kindergarteners in Utah were in a full-day program. This year, 77 percent attend full-day kindergarten. A full-day program essentially doubles the amount of time students are at school, from being in class for two to three hours a day to six or seven hours.

The increase in the amount of time in class could account for the rise in the likelihood that a child will have an accident at school. However, it doesn’t explain the claim that more kindergarteners do not know how to use the bathroom.

This isn’t the first time in recent years potty training in school has come up — pre-K teachers in Buffalo, New York, petitioned the school district to create a policy on potty training in 2019 because they said diaper-changing was taking up class time.

Unlike Utah, New York and New Jersey have laws that prevent schools from barring children from class because they are not potty trained.

Child care workers have always dealt with potty training, but schools are increasingly dealing with this for a simple reason: Children are coming to school at younger ages because there are far more pre-K classes located in schools than in years past, said Zeynep Ercan, president of the National Association of Early Childhood Teacher Educators.

“You have public school teachers who are not used to seeing this kind of variation in development, and now they feel as though they have to be the caregivers [as well as] educators. These two concepts are always a conflict in child care and education systems,” Ercan said.

The expansion of pre-K is a good thing, Ercan said, but it also requires schools to adapt their environments.

“The issue is, how can we make our environments more developmentally appropriate for children? How are we ready for the children, versus how are children ready for it?” Ercan said.

Even though it’s unclear if schools are seeing more kindergarten students attend class in diapers, teachers can help prevent accidents by being flexible about when children go to the bathroom, said Brown, the Austin pediatrician.

“Teachers can play a pivotal role in normalizing the need to use the bathroom when the urge occurs and not stigmatizing a child who needs to stop their learning to do so,” Brown said.

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Letters to the Editor

3 Letters

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  1. Hi , I worked with state and headstart preschool as an instructional aide and substitute preschool teacher for six years. I recently changed career paths in need of a change. I love working with children and their families . I feel that over the year programs have become very” funding/grant”centered and lost the value in self care for educators. I left amidst a mass Exodus of preschool educators in my program. All amazing teachers, yet all feeling burnt out and not validated. Our classroom was basically becoming a daycare. In a class of 20 students on average 12 would be in full on diapers,
    ( scared of the toilet) The rest in pull ups or still having accidents in their underwear. They are coming to class with various social and emotional needs and little to no language or social skills. They however according to families are very tech savvy because they can find their favorite shows on YouTube or some streaming platform. Then administration expected the teachers to do active supervision, conscious Discipline, DRDP documentation all while toileting more than half the class. Then adding mainstreaming SDC preschoolers into our “typically developed students” who are struggling with extreme behaviors, anxiety, language barriers and little to no social skills. The love from the teachers is very present but the support and expectations from the preschool programs is unrealistic. We don’t get formal breaks and can’t even eat lunch in peace. So yes, kindergarten teachers can and should expect an influx in children being sent to school in diapers.

  2. I agree all should be full potty trained before school. Potty should not be a kindergarten teacher responsible,it take away from instruction time.

  3. My 5 (and a half) year old son is still in diapers, however, he has a developmental disorder, is on an IEP, and in a Special Ed Kindergarten class. There are 11 kids (10 boys) in the class & 8 of the 11 are in full diapers. Now this IS a Special Ed class. Butveven that is a LOT of time changing diapers. I can assure you that we have tried everything to potty train our son but unfortunately he will not budge right now. Figuratively & literally. He will sit in it if he has to. Potty training has precluded us from him going to the afterschool program, (which we need for a time after school because we work) due to no staff available to change his diaper there. That ongoing process of getting an aid, etc. is another story. All that said, I don’t see a good reason that a “normally developed ” 5 year old should be in diapers 100% of the time. We have 3 boys & our 2 older boys were potty trained by 3 1/2 which we considered pretty late. It can be a struggle, however, this burden cannot/ should not be placed on teachers.

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