Saturday, October 15, 2016

Meeting Standards Through Play

"Play is often talked about as if it were a relief from serious learning. But for children, play is serious learning. Play is really the work of childhood."

~Fred Rogers



State standards have been around for a long time. As a kindergarten teacher, I feel it is my job to find a way to help the children learn the standards in a way that matches their intellectual, emotional and social development. One way to do this is through play-based learning experiences. 


When I set up Discovery Time areas, I try to balance provocations which build the 21st Century skills of creativity, problem solving, collaboration and critical thinking with those that offer opportunities to explore and learn the kindergarten state standards children are required to master. The latter are the ones I am featuring here, along with an explanation of the focus standards they could help develop.




Possible Focus Standards

  • I can count, with or without objects, to at least 31.
  • I can count, with or without objects, backward from 20.
  • I can read the numerals from 0 to at least 31.
  • I can write the numerals from 0 to at least 31.
  • I can find a number that is 1 more or 1 fewer than a given number.
  • I can compare and order whole numbers, with and without objects, from 0-20.



Possible Focus Standards

  • I can observe and compare plants and animals.
  • I can observe and describe things in nature and compare my observations and descriptions with others.
  • I can sort objects by color, size, shape and texture and explain why I sorted that way.
  • I can name the parts of lots of different plants and animals, even humans.


Possible Focus Standards

  • I can recognize the following 3-D shapes: cylinder, cone, sphere and cube.
  • I can use basic shapes and spatial reasoning to model objects in the real world.


Possible Focus Standards

  • I can identify, create, complete and extend simple patterns.

You can't see them, but there are letters buried in
the leaves.


Possible Focus Standards

  • I can name all the upper- and lowercase letters of the alphabet.

Saturday, October 8, 2016

Integrating Movement in the Classroom


"I believe that the unity of mind and body is an objective reality. They are not just parts somehow related to each other, but an inseparable whole while functioning. A brain without a body could not think … the muscles themselves are part and parcel of our higher functions."

~Moshe Feldenkrais 



The concept of movement in the kindergarten classroom is not new. Kindergarten teachers around the globe know that young children love to move. The truth is, children need to move. As the academic expectations placed on kindergarten students have grown, many teachers have replaced opportunities to move with long periods of time on the carpet listening to instruction. It is no surprise, then, that the number of referrals for ADHD and behavior related concerns has risen. Has children's development changed? I would argue, no.  I believe that children are perhaps not spending time moving outside of school as much as they have in the past, but time devoted to movement in school has reduced as well. 


Brain Breaks, Sensory Breaks, Movement Breaks, Oh, My!


Like many teachers, I have tried to counteract the reality of decreased physical activity by having regularly scheduled brain breaks and movement breaks. Go Noodle and Adventure to Fitness have been great companions the past few years.  Too, I have found ways for students who need them to have sensory breaks outside the classroom. This year, however, I have switched my focus from planned movement breaks to finding ways to integrate movement in the classroom.


Hopefully, we all have people in our professional lives who encourage us to stretch our thinking. One of mine is our Occupational Therapist, Eric. Eric has a way of planting a seed in my head, knowing that it will perhaps sit dormant until it is ripe for growing, but at the same time believing that it will. This has happened time and time again. One such seed is the belief that movement should occur naturally throughout the day. I am not completely there yet, but I have been finding ways to make integrated movement a reality.


Honoring Students' Knowledge of What Their Bodies Need


Most students know what their body needs to feel comfortable. For some, it is sitting cross-legged on the carpet, for others it is kneeling. This year, in my classroom, I have chosen to allow both, as long as it does not impair another student's ability to see or interact with the lesson. I also let my students sit wherever they choose on the rug--again, as long as they respect another's right to learn. I recognize that some students are not ready to handle this much choice, yet, and in those cases I designate a specific area just for them, which seems to help them regulate.


I extend this same philosophy to work time. I do not have assigned spots at tables. In fact, students have the choice to work at a table, sitting on the floor with a clipboard on their lap, standing up at a table or shelf, or lying down--which does double duty by helping to strengthen a child's core (Another tidbit I learned from Eric).



I love that this picture captured the boy on the right checking his pencil grip!




Another way I like to honor students' knowledge of what their bodies need is by having self-selected snack time. Students are allowed to decide if they would like to have their snack time in the morning or afternoon, and then decide when during discovery time they would like to take that snack break.


Building Movement Into the Lesson


One thing I am trying to do this year is keep my mini-lessons short so the students do not have to sit for long periods at a time.  I have tried to find ways to get the students up and moving during the lesson.  Just yesterday, we did a math lesson, which required the students to trace the face of four different 3-dimensional shapes.  I placed one shape at each table and students had to rotate around to trace them. I gave them no directions in regard to how they had to do it, because I also wanted them to work on the social skills of taking turns, resolving conflict (and there was some conflict), working with others, and problem solving. Once they finished, we had a short debriefing on the rug before the students worked on their individual practice activity.




Likewise, for a lesson involving positional words, I took the children outside so they could demonstrate their knowledge of positional words on the playground equipment.






Providing Opportunities for Movement Through Discovery Time Play


A simple way to integrate movement into the kindergarten day is through the activities provided during discovery time. As you can see in the pictures below, some activities are done while standing, some while sitting and some while lying down. In addition, I try to plan activities which will require gross motor and fine motor movements.




This boy's fine motor control was impressive to witness.  It carries through to his handwriting skills as well!













Why Should We Integrate Movement In Our Classrooms?


Simple-- the obvious desire of having students able to attend to lessons when needed. Integrating movement into our classrooms gives the body what it needs to function well--thereby allowing the mind to do so, too. Plus, children are happier when they are allowed to move. Aren't we all?


"We have a brain for one reason and one reason only -- that’s to produce adaptable and complex movements. Movement is the only way we have affecting the world around us… I believe that to understand movement is to understand the whole brain. And therefore it’s important to remember when you are studying memory, cognition, sensory processing, they’re there for a reason, and that reason is action."

~Daniel Wolpert, neuroscientist 

Sunday, October 2, 2016

Discovery Time

Twice a day, the students in my kindergarten class have Discovery Time. This is a time to explore, investigate, create, problem solve, develop relationships and experiment. It is also a time for me to meet with small groups for guided reading, writing, math or inquiry projects. When I am not doing that, it is a time for me to sit down with students to talk about what they are doing and thinking. Discovery Time culminates with a time to share and learn from one another.


Although the main Discovery Time areas do not change, the activities available often do. Below are some pictures of what we have been up to lately.


weaving on the loom

creating patterns

taking apart radios at the take apart area


comparing objects by length

creating mosaics

building wood sculptures


expanding stories from Writing Workshop

building in the construction area

writing letters for friends and family

practicing letter formation

playing at the sensory table

observing and comparing parts of plants

painting

reading and listening to books on CD

creating at the light table

finding things to represent letters for our co-created alphabet

creating a still-life drawing using oil pastels

enjoying a treat for the senses--carrot cake play-doh!

making a plan and then replicating the plan using loose parts

making carrot-applesauce muffins
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