Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Parent-Child Conversations
It reminded me of Raffi's notion of "Child Honouring" (see link below) and how children are our greatest gifts...meant to be nurtured and encouraged in their explorations for a safe and healthy tomorrow. I believe that as educators we must extend our interactions with parents beyond the regimented monthly newsletter. We should engage in meaningful conversations about children and their potential. However about how we delicately go about doing this I am not quite sure. Perhaps we can start by modeling loving, involved, interested relationships with our children. As the conversation between the mother and daughter ended, I used the fifteen minutes I waited in line to stroke my baby's cheek as he slept in his stroller.
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
The Hundred Languages of Children
Monday, December 28, 2009
Art Center Idea
Sunday, December 27, 2009
Online Books
An Excellent New Blog!!!
Homework in Kindergarten?
Developmentally Appropriate Practice
A few teacher friends of mine and I were having a conversation about kindergarten programming and what 'developmentally appropriate practice' (DAP) really looks like in an early years classroom. We talked about how hard it was for some people to nurture developmentally appropriate practices in children while trying to balance each child's individuality and standards-based curriculum and assessment obligations.
What is DAP?
Children are unique people with individual strengths, experiences, interests and needs who learn best through experiences seeing, hearing, touching, moving, and playing (Berry, 1998; Glasgow Koste, 1995). As such, kindergarten programs should provide multiple and varied opportunities for learning, self-expression, and child-led discovery in all learning domains (Ontario Ministry of Education, 2006). A well rounded kindergarten program encourages the intellectual, physical, and social development of all children on a daily basis through thoughtful play, guided by a teacher (Crevola, Dickinson, Trehearne, & Worthy, 2007; Ontario Ministry of Education, 2006). Instruction and activities should be differentiated and provide opportunities for children to experience, practice, refine, and demonstrate their skills and learning in a developmentally appropriate manner. Teacher directed lessons should provide a gradual release of responsibility so that children are able to practice and experiment within the learning opportunities in a supportive environment (Vygotsky, 1978).
Engaging young children in enriching educational activities extends beyond the acquisition of simply literacy and numeracy skills. Kindergarten programs should consider the development of a whole child who is healthy, knowledgeable, motivated, and engaged (Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 2007). Safe and nurturing classrooms encourage and celebrate every aspect of each child’s capacity for learning and provide repeated experiences observing, exploring, experimenting, and sharing within a supportive social context in order to be actively engaged in authentic personal and communal learning.
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD). (2007). The learnin compact redefined: A call to action. A report of the commission of the whole child. Retrieved October 11, 2009 from http://www.wholechildeducation.org/resources/Learningcompact7-07.pdf
Berry, D. (1998). Kids and art: Learning through the senses. Principal, 77, 28-34.
Crevola, C., Dickinson, P., Trehearne, M., & Worthy, J. (2007). Kindergarten matters: Building blocks for learning webcast. Retrieved November 26, 2009 from http://curriculum.org/secretariat/january30.shtml
Glasgow Koste, V. (1995). Dramatic play in childhood: Rehearsal for life. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Gift Giving and Art Making
Wednesday, December 23, 2009
Forcing Bulbs Indoors
Tuesday, December 22, 2009
Interesting Read
Reggio Emilia Approach to Early Years Education
I am an Early Years educator who has been inspired by the Reggio Emilia approach to education. My classroom environment and practice reflect the belief that the children who inhabit it are creative and capable learners who exist as equal and productive members of a larger community, where each person’s contributions and ideas are valued and nurtured.
Our Classroom
Physical Environment
The physical environment of Reggio Emilia classrooms is often referred to as the “third teacher” (Gandini, 1998, p.177) as it is considered just as important and influential in a child’s learning as the family and classroom teacher are. Personal meaning making and knowledge construction occurs when young children are provided multiple opportunities to explore, experiment, and reflect upon their experiences in a safe and supportive educational environment (Bredekamp, 1993).
Curriculum
Children are encouraged to explore and experiment with topics of their interest. Unlike Westernized systems of education where linear curriculums are delivered and followed by each student, Reggio educators are partners in the co-construction of knowledge with children and they exist as co-learners who plan and implement activities and experiences for students based on their personal interests (Bredekamp, 1993). Educators heighten learning for children by asking questions to further their understanding and by engaging directly in the activities alongside the child.
Assessment Strategies
By observing children in action in the classroom, teachers become researchers who document and analyze children’s strengths and needs in the classroom. Educators gather pieces including photos and videos of children in action, transcripts of conversations with children in regards to their learning or in discussion of a piece of work, actual pieces of work, and teacher’s anecdotal notes. These pieces are refered to as ‘pedagogical documentation’ and form a complete picture of a child’s growth and development in the Reggio Emilia program. Similar to student portfolios, pedagogical documentation is an evolving tool of assessment that is continually added to, reflected upon, and shared with families.
Relationships with Families
Parents, considered to be children’s first teachers, are integral to the success of their children and are viewed as partners, collaborators, and advocates in the educational process. Family involvement in a child’s learning is considered vital for academic success, and a strong partnership between home and school is formed through frequent and meaningful communication. Families are encouraged to continue with a child’s explorations and development at home by following Reggio’s philosophies and practices.
Bredekamp, S. (1993). Reflections on Reggio Emilia. Young Children, 49(1). 13-17.
Gandini, L. (1998). Educational and caring spaces. In C. Edwarsds, L. Gandini, & G. Forman, (Eds.). The hundred languages of children: The Reggio Emilia approach to early childhood education - Advanced reflections. Norwood, NJ: Ablex.
Sunday, December 20, 2009
Art Idea
Arts, not guns
Friday, December 18, 2009
Art Idea
Project Love
Looking for an inexpensive, fun, easy, curriculum-friendly way to engage your students in global issues? CODE’s Project Love has been inspiring children across Canada for more than 20 years to think globally, act locally and make a difference. Through Project Love students learn about global issues through curriculum-based activities, fundraising, and making kits of school supplies for students in developing countries. Each Project Love kit includes a pencil, eraser, notebook, ruler and a personal letter from a Canadian student to the kit’s recipient in Malawi or Haiti. Through Project Love, CODE empowers Canadian children to act as global citizens. Students learn about the challenges their peers in other parts of the world face, and understand that the kits of school supplies they assemble and send can make a real difference. Project Love also enables students to demonstrate leadership, philanthropy and social justice. This year, our goal is to send 75,000 Project Love kits to Malawi and Haiti, countries where educational resources are scarce. Education is the key to reducing poverty. Every single child - every boy and girl in the world - has the right to an education that gives them a real chance in life. About 500 schools across the country participate in Project Love each year. CODE makes it fun and easy with its downloadable posters, forms, teacher resources, a DVD and an on-line interactive bulletin board where we can share your creative fundraising activities with others. Your ideas may motivate others to get involved. To register, download our teacher resources, or to learn more about CODE and Project Love, visit: www.codecan.org |
Thursday, December 17, 2009
Practice of Freedom
“Education either functions as an instrument which is used to facilitate integration of the younger generation into the logic of the present system and bring about conformity or it becomes the practice of freedom, the means by which men and women deal critically and creatively with reality and discover how to participate in the transformation of their world.” (Shaull, 2003, p.34)
Shaull, R. (2003). Foreword. In P. Freire, Pedagogy of the oppressed: 30th Anniversary edition. New York: The Continuum International Publishing Group Inc.
This is one of my favourite quotes. How do you as an early years educator encourage the practice of freedom in your classroom? Children today need to be prepared for life in an unknown future. This requires time for them to engage in long periods of self-directed, authentic, collaborative, and exploratory activities that focus on the process, and not necessarily the product.
Admission Test for Kindergarten
Ranking children before they even set a foot in the classroom?
This article from the New York Times discusses an admissions test that is currently in use in many areas for acceptance into kindergarten.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/21/nyregion/21testprep.html?ref=us
I disagree completely with this practice. Too often kindergarten is seen as the beginning step for a life-time of standards-based, quantitative, one-best-way approaches to learning. Children develop at such unique stages and come from such differing backgrounds. How can we possibly measure their "preparedness" for kindergarten with a tool? Why would we even want to? Isn't the individuality (strengths AND needs) of children what makes for rich and diverse experiences in the classroom?
10 Tips to Help Your Child with Reading
10 Tips to Help Your Child with Reading (Tips for Kindergarten to Grade Three)
(from the Government of Ontario's ABC123 Tips to Help Parents website http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/abc123/eng/)
This resource describes ten cost-effective, easy to implement ideas for how parents can support and encourage their child’s reading at home. Each idea or activity can be repeated multiple times and suggestions are made for how parents can cheaply buy, make, or borrow the materials needed. Many of the tips presented also encourage the adult to be a reading role-model. The tips include:
- Cuddle up and read.
- Public libraries today are worlds to explore so try to go regularly.
- Make your kitchen part of your “reading zone”.
- Words are everywhere – take everyday opportunities to read with your child.
- Games can be great learning tools.
- Computers are reader friendly too!
- Books make great gifts.
- Subscribe to a magazine.
- Be a reading role model.
- Keep books, magazines, and newspapers handy.
Parental Use of the Resource
There are a number of ways parents can utilize this resource:
- These tips encourage parents to reflect upon some of the choices they are making in terms of how they spend their time with their children. Reading together or reading alongside one another is a great alternative to t.v. watching and videogame playing during family time.
- In today’s times of economic uncertainty, the suggestions offered to parents are easy and effective without much cost. Borrowing literacy materials from the library and requesting books and magazines as gifts do not cost parents much money but the literacy gain for children is monumental.
- Adults today are busy and this resource may encourage them to unwind at the end of the day with a book instead of the internet or t.v.
- These ideas are active and hands-on, hopefully helping to dispel the idea that language (specifically reading) needs to be taught and practiced by children with rote-learning, pencil and paper tasks such as printing worksheets.
Teacher Support of the Resource
There are a number of ways teachers can support parents with using this website:
- These tips could be a great addition to a classroom or school newsletter in order to support student reading at home and introduce families to the Ministry of Education ABC123 website.
- These tips could also be specifically provided to families of students who are in need of extra support (e.g., identified or flagged on early literacy classroom tools such as DIBELS or Marie Clay).
- Families who ask a teacher for ‘homework’ or extra worksheets in order to help children practice language skills at home could also be referred to this website as it encourages developmentally appropriate reading activities that can be repeated as desired.
- Families can be introduced to this website during kindergarten registration, kindergarten open houses, and family literacy nights as a way of encouraging families to actively engage children in a variety of reading activities in preparation for the start of school.
Right to Play
Right To Play uses sport and play programs to build local capacity in four strategic areas:
- Basic Education and Child Development:
Right To Play’s programs foster the physical, cognitive and social development of children to teach important values and life skills. - Health Promotion and Disease Prevention:
Right To Play’s programs are used to educate and mobilize communities around national health and disease prevention priorities, including HIV and AIDS, malaria and immunization. - Conflict Resolution and Peace Education:
Right To Play’s programs are used as tools for teaching conflict resolution and peace building skills. Participation in regular activities encourages and facilitates the healing of communities and the reintegration of children affected by war. - Community Development:
Right To Play works in partnership with local organizations to build sustainable community infrastructure through the engagement of local staff and both local and international volunteers.
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Capturing Children's Interest in Winter and Snow
Children are naturally curious about the world around them. I've noticed that winter and snow are of particular interest to little ones. There are many experiences that can be incorporated into the various classroom centers around snow and winter. Classroom centers can be used to integrate multiple real-life contexts in order to capture children's interests and imaginations and encourage them to engage in cooperative play and exploration.
· providing students with squeeze spray bottles of coloured water to use outdoors on a snowy day in order to colour, colour mix, and create designs in the snow
· placing shredded white paper in a large tactile tub (or empty water table) along with plastic trees, rocks, twigs, and various forest animals and encouraging children to dramatize a wintry forest habitat
· placing various combinations of ice cubes coloured as the primary colours (e.g., one blue and one yellow; one blue and one red; one yellow and one red) in separate bowls at the science area and encourage students to make predictions and then observations about what will happen the ice cubes melt
· pictures of winter activities (e.g., skiing, skating, sledding), summer activities (e.g., swimming, skipping rope, jogging), and general anytime activities (e.g., driving a car, eating breakfast) can be placed at the math table and students can be encouraged to sort the pictures into a Venn chart with the headings ‘winter’, ‘summer’, and ‘both’
· incorporating various sizes and shapes of ice (frozen using a variety of containers and molds) and snow from outside into the water table so students can explore, experiment, and create with these materials
· placing a large quantity of outdoor snow in large bins at the science table so students can explore it using large magnifying glasses and observe and record in a communal journal their observations and emerging understandings as it changes state from solid, to liquid, to gas
Bird Feeding
Class List of Rights and Responsibilities
-everyone has the right to participate
-everyone has the responsibility to share
-each person has the chance to play
-the classroom belongs to everyone
-we respect each other's differences
Once the list of rights and responsibilities is recorded, each student has the option to sign his or her name on it. It is prominently displayed and throughout the year pictures of children in action in the classroom and around the school are posted around it.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
Art Idea
© Dreamstime.com
New Curriculum in Ontario?
© Dreamstime.com
I read on the Toronto Star a few days ago that the Ministry of Education in Ontario has proposed modifying the existing curriculum in Grade 1 -8 in order to reflect the changing needs of people in society. The current curriculum has over 3000 objectives to be satisfied by the time a child is done elementary school, the vast majority of which are rote-learning, memorization tasks. The government is proposing changing the curriculum so that it has fewer distinct pieces and instead encourages children to think about "the bigger picture" and learn how to critically explore concepts in a more authentic manner. I'm really very excited about this as I believe it is this kind of learning that will prepare children for an unknown future. (Who needs to memorize things anymore? Isn't that what the internet and computers are for?)
Monday, December 14, 2009
Child Honouring (Raffi)
I have always identified Raffi (Cavoukian) as a children's singer. However I recently learned that he is also an advocate for young children. At a town hall forum to discuss the recent decision in Ontario to move forward with full day learning in kindergarten, Dr. Charles Pascal (a leading researcher for early childhood) praised Raffi's efforts to use his music and status as an entertainer to speak on behalf of children's physical and emotional needs. Raffi calls it "Child Honouring" and describes it as adults honouring children by putting their needs first so that they might have a loving, safe, and healthy future. Raffi is also concerned about environmental issues and having a clean planet for our children's future.
Since learning of Raffi's "Child Honouring" I have made it an effort to visit his website and read through the papers and presentations he has posted. I agree completely. As early childhood educators we advocate for the safety and well-being of all of our students' futures. Each one rightfully deserves the love, time, patience, and health in order to develop according to his or her true potential. The question becomes how can we incorporate Child Honouring more fully into our classrooms and inspire families?
Science in the Classroom
I was surfing this morning, trying to find some new blogs to read. I came across "Science and Children's Early Years Blog" and was amazed by the quality of the content. I immediately added it to my list of favourite websites. Quickly scanning the blog, I was able to learn how to engage children in authentic, meaningful whole and small group science activities and experiments. What a valuable resource for a busy kindergarten teacher!
I know from experience how hard it can be to create an engaging science program in an early years environment. Often the materials and resources are not available. Non-fiction books are hard to find in small school libraries. Science can often become a one-sided situation in a classroom, where a teacher is the one reading from science texts, demonstrating experiments for students, and displaying only readily available materials at the science center. I've fallen into this trap too.
If we want to prepare our children for the higher level thinking needed for success in their future lives and careers (who knows what kind of jobs they will have 15+ years from now) then we need to strive to engage our youngest learners in active, authentic, challenging scientific experiences that allow them to question, predict, explore, analyze, and discuss what they have done. Easier said than done, but the information at Science and Children's Early Years Blog will help teachers see how simple, everyday activities like play dough and water play have the potential for being rich scientific activities in the classroom.
http://blogs.nsta.org/EarlyYearsBlog/default.aspx
Sunday, December 13, 2009
Christmas Crafts versus Art
Well, it's the last week of school before the holidays and I'm wondering how many teachers are going to be engaging their students in meaningful art activities this week in order to celebrate the upcoming holidays. I am not a fan of 'crafts' that are done in the kindergarten classroom --- activities that are teacher created and modeled where each child makes the same piece of work as another. I know this type of activity is a popular one this time of year, especially when parents like receiving cutesy things from school. I believe it's more meaningful for children to be engaging in art activities that allow them free range in exploration and expression. This way they can discuss their work with others. Some 'holiday' art you might consider doing this week include:
-putting red, white and green paint at the art easel with sparkles in it
-mixing 1 part paint to 2 parts sugar or salt at the easel (it'll create a sparkly texture when dry)
-having an assorted mix of holidays card fronts, ribbon, and wrapping paper (and other holiday goodies) for children to use in whatever way they wish
-having children stamp with holiday cookie cutters and paint
-providing various colours of clay or playdough available so children can sculpt a gift for their families