Glen Ellyn District 41 celebrates start of full-day kindergarten project

Glen Ellyn School District 41 broke ground on the full day kindergarten center addition opening in the fall of 2025 on the campus of Churchill Elementary School. Superintendent Jeff McHugh, school board president Robert Bruno and Churchill principal Amanda Kanter provided remarks and students celebrated by participating in the ceremony.

About this time next school year, Glen Ellyn School District 41 will welcome students into a new full-day kindergarten center.

School board members, Superintendent Jeffrey McHugh, Glen Ellyn Village President Mark Senak and other district officials donned hard hats last week for a groundbreaking ceremony at the construction site to celebrate a project years in the making.

The 12-classroom addition to Churchill Elementary will allow the district to offer an all-day kindergarten program. The center is set to open in the fall of 2025 on the north side of the Churchill campus in Glen Ellyn.

“We had some preschoolers there who are going to be in kindergarten a year from now. … Those are the students that we’re going to be supporting moving forward,” McHugh told the school board.

Legislation signed by Gov. JB Pritzker in August 2023 requires Illinois school districts to provide full-day kindergarten by the 2027-28 school year.

“Developmentally appropriate, high-quality, play-based kindergarten lays the foundation for a child to grow academically and develop essential social-emotional skills,” State Superintendent Tony Sanders said in a statement at the time. “Universal access to full-day kindergarten brings us closer to ensuring all Illinois students receive the early learning opportunities they need to thrive.”

Long before the law took effect, District 41 studied how to accommodate a full-day program and how to pay for it. District leaders decided to have all full-day kindergarten students in one location. The district is paying for the estimated $28 million project out of existing reserves.

Architects designed an entry plaza, a two-story addition with six classrooms on each level and a reading garden. The center also will house a multi-purpose room for indoor play, an upper-level dining commons and flex space.

District 41 families still will have the option of half-day kindergarten.