Friday, February 28, 2020

February 28. 2020


Dear Families,

Enjoy your "extra" day tomorrow! Leap Year is such an interesting thing to me~

We FINALLY got to celebrate our 100th day of school (complete without electricity) and I want to send a huge thank you and shout out to those who sent in food for our 100 food collection as well as those who shared snacks for our celebration! It was a great day~

We have read a great many stories and learned so much about dental health this week. How very important it is to keep our teeth healthy. They are bringing home new toothbrushes today!

During writing time they are writing narrative and sharing things that have happened in their lives. We have had some great adventures as a group! 

Animated Alphabet is our approach to phonemic awareness and spelling. The letters are taught through a multi sensory approach of music, dance, characters and signs which help the students hold onto that information. The character we learned this week was Ike.

In math we are working with teen numbers, formation of numbers, making pictures to match the number written, addition and subtraction practice, counting by 10s, making sets of 10 to 100 (and beyond), probability practice, problem solving, and matching domino dots to the numbers they represent.  Our routines at calendar time include; counting to the calendar number of the day, weather observations, tracking the number of days we have been in school and days of the week. 

We are learning about the Woolwich Way! The Woolwich Way is made up of 6 qualities that will help us to be the best we can be! (Courtesy- I can use good manners, Compassion-I can help others, Respect- I can treat others kindly, Honesty-I can tell the truth, Responsibility- I can take care of myself and my stuff, Quality- I can do my best even when things are hard)


Upcoming Events: 
March 20th is now a regular day of school in an attempt to make up some snow day time!!!!!

Friday, February 21, 2020

This is for a class....

Woolwich Central School

5 VERY IMPORTANT SKILLS FOR SUCCESS! 

Empathy                                                       Self- Control

This is important for your child because                            Is important in all that we do!
teaching this skill will help them to not only                     Being able to regulate our thoughts
learn how to take the perspective of others,                       and emotions (even when we are upset)
but will also encourage them to respect people                 is a skill they will need forever. We will
when they don't agree with them.                                      practice making decisions and learning
                                                                                           about consequences.

                                                                                                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j0YDE8_jsHk

Integrity                                                   Embracing Diversity

Integrity is much more than honesty.  We                          We will always work to honor the fact
can learn to be honest (super important!) yet                     that our differences make us unique and 
lack integrity. We will be using different                           special and in all circumstances we will
children's stories to begin learning about                           caring and respectful toward each other.
integrity and what it looks like for us. 

                                                                                                    https://www.youtube.com/watch? v=oODXem4oRp0

Grit

I like to think of grit as resilience for those                                
times when we have to push through and 
keep on going. The Little Engine That Could
comes to mind. Things can feel really hard but
in kindergarten we are going to learn about
what strategies we can use if we feel stuck. 


I will continue to keep you up to date with all of the special activities, new vocabulary, and children's books that we are using in class for each skill. If you have any questions please contact me! I look forward to strengthening these essential skills that all students (and adults) should have. 


Friday, February 14, 2020

February 14, 2020


Well...the sickness caught me! They spent time with a substitute this week and then we had a snow day. Today we celebrated Valentine's Day~ Hope it was wonderful! THANK YOU for all my sweet surprises! 

Wishing you a fun and adventurous vacation! I hope we can get outside and rid ourselves of this nasty, germy stuff!!!

We finished our mission to Kenya and found that our hypothesis was TRUE! There was drinkable water under HIP academy!!! YEAH! Our next mission is a little ways away but we are looking forward to learning all about Borneo...


Upcoming Events: 100th Day of School will be when we return from vacation...more celebrating to                                   come!

                                February 17-21 February Vacation

                                Book Orders Due: February 24th if you want to order

Sunday, February 2, 2020

Jean Piaget~ Cognitive Development


"The goal of education is not to increase the amount of knowledge but to create the possibilities for a child to invent and discover, to create men who are capable of doing new things."  Jean Piaget




Jean Piaget was a Swiss Psychologist who was born in 1896 in Neuchatel, Switzerland and died in 1980 in Geneva, Switzerland. All through his childhood, Jean was fascinated with science and studied many different animals. He had a love of mollusks and studied them in depth for many years. At age 11 he also wrote about the albino sparrow and gained recognition for that work, surprising all when they found out his actual age. He went on to study zoology, and then psychology, abnormal psychology, and also dove deeper into psychoanalysis.  He attended the University of Neuchatel, University of Geneva, and the University of Zurich. Jean Piaget spent six decades of his life deeply involved in childhood psychology during which he gave to us his 4 Stages of Cognitive Development.

Although that was over 100 years ago, Piaget's theory and his 4 Stages of Cognitive Development are still the cornerstones to children's intellectual development and their overall childhood development.

Piaget's 4 Stages of Cognitive Development include; sensorimotor, preoperational, concrete operational, and formal operational. Although these labels may be a mouthful and perhaps confusing, they are easily explained and absolutely observable stages if you are working with or have your own children.

Sensorimotor Stage occurs from the time a child is born to the time they begin to acquire language. This stage involves the child using their senses to make sense of the world around them. They are grabbing, sucking, looking, and listening to their environment. This is also the stage of object permanence and the child's understanding of an object still existing even when they can't see it or hear it. This is illustrated in the game of Peek-a-Boo.

Preoperational Stage is when the child begins to speak. There is an increase of play and pretend occurring and the child will experience difficulty trying to take another person's perspective on something. There is a lot of questioning "why" and this stage can last up to 7 years of age.

Concrete Operational Stage occurs between 7 and 11 years of age and is the stage when problem solving and logic begin to strengthen although full common sense isn't cemented at this stage.

Formal Operational Stage lasts from 12 years old through adulthood. The ability to think abstractly, the entrance of metacognition (thinking about your thinking), and more complex problem solving skills are being formed at this stage.

It is important to note that the ages and stages can differ between children, adolescence, and adults. Piaget was met with a great deal of challenges and differences of opinions (as most scientists, researchers, and psychologists are). Piaget admitted that these stages are quite rigid and really are more of a continuum of growth than to be fit into a box with no wiggle room. Beyond that, Jean Piaget set the stage for looking at children and their cognitive growth in a way that is still very much alive and at work today.

Child-centered practices and open ended questions in order to hear how children process the information we are giving them are directly related to Piaget's extensive work. He was a strong believer in the child taking the lead in their educational endeavours and the teacher to act more of a guide or mentor in the process to help when things became confusing or needed clarification. I believe Jean Piaget would have been incredibly excited with the STEM and STEAM initiatives currently at play around the world and when we are working with our STEAM materials and the children are so engaged in their non-structured learning and their outcomes are not all the same, it gives me great pride knowing I'm following in his footsteps.

Spontaneous activity as it relates to expected knowledge is an everyday occurrence in our kindergarten classroom. I sincerely hope the outcomes of my students match the expectations of our kindergarten curriculum. I believe your students are getting far more out of open-ended learning experience and spontaneous wonderings and experiments that they need to. We are having a wonderful time as we journey through our (Jean Piaget's) stages of Cognitive Development. Let me know if you want to talk more at length about this!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piaget%27s_theory_of_cognitive_development

https://www.biography.com/scientist/jean-piaget