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| Overview | Curriculum Areas | Gooey Things | Recipes | Photos | Artwork | |
The Child Study Center provides a well-balanced curriculum to preschool children in a half-day facility. The curriculum seeks to nurture children's development in all four areas: social, emotional, cognitive and physical. To this end the school offers a modified open structured classroom concept in which the schedule, routines, staff, classroom activity areas and presentation of materials are highly structured to meet the needs of each developing child within the context of the whole group. The curriculum model is "open" in that children are provided free activity times in which they learn to make choices of areas that are of interest and/or need and to negotiate their way into and out of various subject areas. These curriculum areas are: sand, water, playdough, language arts, blocks, dramatic play, art, music, science and math. In addition to free activity times and outdoor play, the schedule includes group meeting times, snack times, and walks on campus. The outdoor activities are considered to be equally important to the indoor and are carefully planned to support specific developmental goals for each child as well as the group as a whole. Each child's progress is noted daily by careful staff observations and future curriculum is planned accordingly. Some basic guidelines of the curriculum are: 1) Preschool children learn through direct hands on experience using all of their senses: taste, smell, touch, sight, and hearing. Thus, the curriculum must present a wide range of activities that include experiencing the stuff of the world (all sorts of animals, minerals and vegetables, like shells, leaves, flour, water, butterflies, wood, clay, and metal) as long as that stuff is safe. 2) Preschool children think differently from older people. They are concrete rather than abstract thinkers. They cannot understand fully about things that they cannot see, touch, feel, taste and hear in the present. Thus, it is most effective to show them tadpoles and frogs than to lecture to them about tadpoles and frogs. 3) Because preschool children are not abstract thinkers, they are just beginning to understand representation, such as a toy telephone represents a real telephone or a block can represent a hammer or a child can represent a daddy. Since they are just learning that some things can stand for (represent) other things, the curriculum must provide lots of practice in representation. This is known as pretend play or dramatic play. When a child can practice and learn that a toy red hat can represent a firefighter, then she can begin to understand that the alphabetic letter "B" stands for a sound in our language, "buh." Understanding representation is one of the most basic beginning reading skills. 4) All children develop along certain predictable timetables in all four areas, social, emotional, physical and cognitive. Yet each child is an individual and may be more or less advanced in each area. Thus the curriculum must offer open-ended experiences that children can learn from on many levels. For example, in blocks, one child might make an elaborate representational castle, while the next child simply lines up two blocks on the floor. Sand, water, playdough, dramatic play props, art materials, and music, for example, all offer opportunities for complex or simpler play, depending upon the child's development. 5) All children are individuals with their own backgrounds and constitutions. Each child has a particular history (family, medical, social, educational), birth order, culture (perhaps second language), set of strengths and challenges, needs and desires. A preschool must provide a curriculum that teaches to the "generic" 2, 3, or 4-year-old as well as to each individual child. For example, all 3-year-olds should learn to recognize and name the colors, but, in addition, Sammy might be particularly drawn to colors because his mommy is an artist. All 4-year-olds should be using language to communicate to others, but Alfredo might need particular instruction since his primary language is Italian. 6) Preschool children (all children) must feel and be safe in order to learn. Thus the curriculum must include clear expectations for behavior in which children treat materials, themselves and others with respect. Safety is not limited to looking for rusty nails or covering electrical outlets. The best safety is offered by a developmentally appropriate curriculum in a well-supervised classroom. 7) Directors and teachers must be able to express a clearly articulated philosophy of education according to these guidelines and to justify each activity according to its social, emotional, cognitive and physical benefits to development. In addition, since preschoolers are concrete (not abstract) thinkers, their classroom (and playground) itself is the curriculum. Therefore, teachers must be able to express their philosophy directly by how they plan the space (furniture, walls, yard) to be appropriate for young children's stages of learning. 8) Our curriculum conforms to the OCCS (Office of Child Care Services) standards and NAEYC (National Association for the Education of Young Children) guidelines for diversity, developmental appropriateness, (including physical safety) and most up-to-date research and teaching practices. Language Arts: - A reading corner with books available for children to look through and "read" on their own level or to be read to by an adult.
Mathematics: - Activities and materials that promote numerical concepts, such as one-to-one matching, counting, sorting, comparisons and seriation.
Science: - Lots of activities to experience the stuff of the world in all of its myriad forms and changes.
Art: - The widest possible experience with the widest possible range of materials to promote creativity, yet presented in a limited way developmentally suited to preschoolers. Thus we present a few kinds of materials at a time.
Materials Without Shape (Amorphous Materials) Playdough, Sand and Water: - Encourages scientific exploration of physics, geometry and math
Blocks and Other Manipulative Materials: - Shelves that present wooden unit (Kindergarten) blocks for child use
Dramatic (Pretend) Play: - Wide array of clothes and props to sustain representational play
Outdoor Play: - Outdoor play is considered as important to young children’s development
as is indoor play. A fully equipped, safe, yet challenging outdoor playground
provides, sand, natural landscape, swings, climbing equipment, dramatic play
areas, places to gather as a group, and gardening opportunities.
Campus Walks: - The Child Study Center staff plans regularly scheduled walks on the Wellesley College campus. Typical walk destinations are the waterfall, the meandering stream and bridges, Paramecium Pond, the Davis Arts Center, and the Greenhouse botanical gardens. Children have opportunities to negotiate transitions, broaden their experience, learn to socialize in a larger societal context and learn new concepts. Walk experiences are always related back to classroom learning themes. For example, children might have studied about and collected pinecones, and then used the cones in art or science activities. Or children might have studied about site-specific sculptures and then visited the sculpture in the nearby Arboretum.
Group Time: - Group time usually refers to any time that the whole group comes together
under the leadership of a teacher to, for example, sing, play instruments,
listen to music, hear and tell stories, share news, view a slide show, discuss
topics, receive directions, or perform creative movement.
Music: - At the Child Study Center music is not limited to group times. Music is
sung spontaneously whenever it is appropriate, for example when getting dressed
to go outdoors. Sometimes children may listen to recordings individually or
in small group settings. Instruments are sometimes made available throughout
the free activity time.
Snack time: - Snack times provide additional opportunities for adult-led group times;
in this case the activity is eating and sharing social conversation.
Self help: - Learning to do basic self-care is essential to the curriculum for young
children. Children are given many carefully guided opportunities to dress themselves
(tie shoe laces, button, zip, snap and Velcro clothing); wash hands; be aware
of bodily needs for toileting, thirst, and fatigue; and take care of some personal
belongings. Teachers teach these life skills in increments, as other curriculum
is taught.
Mary Ucci"Gooey Things" are not only fun to use but are also highly educational, especially for young children. They meet children's educational needs in all four areas of development: physical, cognitive, emotional, and social.
Here are some recipes that you could use to help meet your child's educational needs. Playdough Recipe |