Miss Maggie's Preschool Class
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Tomorrow we are celebrating May the fourth, be with you! If your kiddo has any Star Wars gear they are welcome to wear it
Get excited - It’s time! Come out and join us for Kindergarten and Preschool REGISTRATION! April 19 4:00-6:00 pm! Check it out! ⬇️ 💛💙🦅
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Dolls, watercolors, gym fun ❤️💕
We need this at our playground!!!
Cheerio necklaces
Nature hike. Deer tracks, ants in a log, violets, dandelion writing, birds flying high
Stacking markers
The Bad Mood and the Stick book literacy watercolors! We loved talking about what puts us in a grouchy mood, and what we can do to make us smile again. ❤️
Social and emotional intelligence should come before academics. Having a child that’s well adjusted helps create a growth mindset that will propel them into success in all areas.
Baggy book swap. 📚📓
Say Cheese…burger!
Self portraits 🥰
Bear snores on. We have our very own bear cave ❤️
Free time/centers this morning ❤️
Did you know that birds eat extra seeds/feed before a big snow? We learned that today! So, we made snowman bird feeders. Happy bird watching to you! ❤️
We made our own healthy snacks today for morning snack! Ohhh but we did add a little bit of sprinkles. Apple slices, peanut butter, and sprinkles!
Early literacy activities to promote reading comprehension ❤️
Primary colors to secondary colors makes awesome tie dye! Whenever these dry we will make them super cool sun catchers
We studied different architecture from around the world today, then we built our own!!
We made snowmen ❤️
Flannel day
The Pigeon has feelings, too
We wrote our names at the top, and explained how we were feeling today and why. ❤️
The Mitten early literacy activity. We made our own mittens using a mitten print, cut out animals, yarn, and glue!!! Sooo messy but sooo fun.
After all reading comprehension is best understood with a hands on approach.
Ask anyone who works in a primary school or elementary , and you'll hear a similar refrain. dropping out of their chairs is the new normal. But why? What's going on that's making simply sitting in a chair a physical challenge for our youth?
A highly respected director of a progressive preschool who has been teaching preschoolers for about 40 years says she has seen major changes in the social and physical development of children in the past few generations. “Kids are just different,” she said. “They are more easily frustrated – often crying at the drop of a hat.” She has also observed that children were frequently falling out of their seats “at least three times a day,” less attentive, and running into each other and even the walls. “It is so strange. You never saw these issues in the past.”
She went on to complain that even though her school was considered highly progressive, they were still feeling the pressure to limit free more than she would like in order to meet the growing demands for academic readiness that was expected before children entered kindergarten.
It is through active free play outdoors where children start to build many of the foundational life skills they need in order to be successful for years to come. It is before the age of 7 years — ages traditionally known as “pre-academic” — when children desperately need to have a multitude of whole-body sensory experiences on a daily basis in order to develop strong bodies and minds. This is best done outside where the senses are fully ignited and young bodies are challenged by the uneven and unpredictable, ever-changing terrain.
Preschool years are not only optimal for children to learn through play, but also a critical developmental period. If children are not given enough natural movement and play experiences, they start their academic careers with a disadvantage. They are more likely to be clumsy, have difficulty paying attention, trouble controlling their emotions, utilise poor problem-solving methods, and demonstrate difficulties with social interactions. We are consistently seeing , , and issues pop up more and more in later childhood, partly because of inadequate opportunities to move and play at an early age.
The system, located inside our inner ear, is responsible for our sense of balance and spatial awareness. It also plays an important role in focus and attention, visual skills, and emotional regulation. It is stimulated and developed by moving through space in a variety of directions—particularly at high speeds.
“Inside your inner ear are little hair cells. And we need to move in all different directions so that fluid moves back and forth and stimulates those hair cells, and that develops the vestibular sense. That sense is key to all the other senses. If that's not working right, it can affect everything," says Angela Hanscom, pediatric occupational therapist.
Weaker core and postural muscles, an underdeveloped vestibular sense, and too many consecutive hours spent at a desk without a break for physical activity all add up. Once we put these factors together, we can start to understand why a child might fall out of their seat at school.
Research continues to point out that young children learn best through meaningful play experiences. Education has need to transition towards play-based learning rather than away from it, for the sake of our current and upcoming generations.
https://cstu.io/bb0baa
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2017/03/17/the-consequences-of-forcing-young-kids-to-sit-too-long-in-class/
Such an important reminder in this global moment. A child’s purpose is to be a child. That’s it.
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Their purpose isn’t to fill in worksheets or learn times tables.
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Their purpose isn’t to create a resume for adulthood.
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Their purpose isn’t to make us adults feel better about ourselves by reaching milestones, checking boxes or achieving.
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Their purpose is to play and explore, to learn and stumble, to meltdown and make up.
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To be wild and free. To laugh, to create, to take a really long time to do the simplest things!
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And your purpose is to support them unconditionally as they do that.
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This time we have right now is going to pass no matter what we do.
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How we use it is up to us. How we view it - as a gift or an inconvenience - is up to us. Perspective is one of our most powerful parenting tools.
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So be with your kids. Revel in the slowness of childhood together. Find your rhythm and be patient when it takes time to evolve. You've got this (even when you feel like you don't!). ✨