Spring Picnic and Easter Egg Hunt


A few reminder about Wednesdays Picnic.....




  • It will be a regular morning for those scheduled to be here.
  • Non-perishable items can be brought tomorrow or Wed morning at drop-of
  • If you would like to walk with us please be here by 10:45 am.
  • The egg hunt will begin at 11 am in the baseball field at G Park 
  • Please bring a basket! 
  • Siblings are welcome to attend but the egg hunt will only be for the kids enrolled.
  • Please let us know ahead of time if your child will be returning for nap-time. 
  • It should be fun ... don't forget your cameras :)

Making Connections

Thinking back to yesterday's article I wanted to share my thoughts on brain and language development. Dr. Gartrell talked about "making connections". I believe this is a main way that young children process the world, develop language and create a base of knowledge. 

Preschool is an incredibly important time in your child's overall development. This is a time when you (we) can set in stone good behaviors and preferences toward learning, curiosity and socializing. The brain develops by cells communicating with each other and making connections. The more that the child experiences, the more they will communicate and the more the cells will connect. When a child reaches the age of three, they have twice the number of connections within the brain than the average adult does. The way in which the brain learns something during the preschool years is different to how an adult brain would learn.

Factors Affecting Preschool Brain Development

·        The amount of quality time a parent spends with the child.
·        How much the child is read to.
·        How they are spoken to.

A few days ago a 2 year old girl was playing the sand box. She sat happily for a long time repeatedly saying "beach". Although she has very few words she has many experiences to which she is building her knowledge and language from. Instead of "correcting" her Kathy smiled and said "yes, sand at the beach". How wonderful that she had this experience to build upon. 

The more we do the more we learn! Circle time is often spent sharing "what we did this weekend". It's so wonderful to hear the children share about their adventures and experiences; "fishing", "an art gallery", "the library", "hiking", "camping", "farmers market". These are the experiences which create family bonding, memories AND language. They also provide opportunities to experience diversity and cultural awareness; a quality of acceptance that we want to nurture early. 


I Hear, I Know
I See, I Remember
I do, I understand 
Building language is really fun to watch. I often give parents the example of a cow. For a young child they may call all animals by one name. They then learn that that there are different kinds and one is a cow. Next they learn that cows say "moo". As their learning expands they learn that cows live on a farm, that there are daddy cows and mommy cows, that cows make milk and then that boy and girl animals may have different names. Further into early elementary they will learn about different breeds of cows and what foods may be made by their meat and milk. Rarely do we have a 2 or 3 year old who tells us that Jersey cows are the brown ones or that their milk has a high fat content. As you can see their knowledge needs a base to expand from. The more experiences they have as a toddler and young preschooler the more solid this foundation may become. 

The language we use also helps make these connections. We seem to all be very good at this when we "talk" to infants. They coo and we coo back and smile; our natural way of extending the conversation. As kids get older that happens less and less. A few phrases to help a preschooler make points of reference:

"Remember the other day when we ___ ?"
"This similar to ____"
"She is crying, look at her face, she is ____"

Give details, use proper names, use describing words, share feelings, categorize.... talk, talk and then talk some more! 


Follow-up activities are also fun:




Print pictures and put them into small photo albums for the child to revisit the trip or activity

Have them dictate a story or draw a picture after an outing
Review the days events at dinner or in bed
Prepare them for new events (getting hair cut, going to the Dr., grandma visiting)




As the spring and summer weather entices us to get out of the house, take the kids and explore the wonderful rich community we live in. 




Readiness: a State of Mind

I came across this article and it really resonated with me. I hope you all take a minute to read it and think about how you communicate with your child (and in turn how your child is learning to react and communicate to others). 

Readiness: Not a State of Knowledge, but a State of Mind


By Dr. Dan Gartrell

People used to think children were ready for kindergarten if they could say the ABC’s, count, identify colors, and write their first name. Readiness was always more complicated than that, and new brain research is helping us understand what readiness really is. Readiness doesn’t mean just knowing the academic basics. It means a child has a willing attitude and confidence in the process of learning: a healthy state of mind.

How do families help their children gain this state of mind? By being responsive to all areas of their children’s development—physical, emotional, social, cultural, language, and cognitive (thinking). Children are born with a great ability to learn and grow—different kinds of abilities, to be sure, but abilities that individually and together constitute the miracle of humanity.

Adults do best for their children when they nurture this unexpressed potential rather than ignore, reject, or try to train it. Healthy development, and with it school readiness, is the result of secure, responsive adult–child relationships. Here are eight parenting practices that nurture children’s untold potential and readiness to learn.

1. Have contact talks with your child each day. A contact talk is a few moments of shared time between adult and child. Contact talks can happen anytime, day or night—often while reading together, but also while giving a bath, changing diapers (really), taking a walk, riding in a car, or when your child approaches you. When you decide that a contact talk will happen, stop what you are doing. Listen, encourage, and support. Don’t “teach, preach, or screech.” Learn more about this little person and help that child learn more about you, as adult and child together in the family you share.
Contact talks build healthy attachment between an adult and child like nothing else can. They support the development of a child’s self-esteem, social skills, thinking skills, and language abilities (key capacities for school success). If contact talks take place during physical activities, they enhance physical development.

Preschool child in car at night: “The moon is following us!”
Adult (quietly smiling): “I wonder where it’s going.”
Child: “To our house, of course. Moon likes it at our house.”
Adult: “It’s nice to have a home that’s liked.”
Child: “Yep.” (Smiling, continues looking at the moon).


In a few years, this same child will understand that the moon just looks like it is following the car. But no correction of this perception is needed now. What is important is a shared quality moment around the child’s beginning interpretations of the world and the people in it. Contact talks don’t have to be long, but they do have to happen, every day. They tell your child you value her and what she has to say is worthwhile.

2. Recognize that children's reasoning skills are just beginning to develop. Problem-solving and reasoning skills, what some call executive function, start to develop in the brain at about age 3. These abilities, including the capacity to understand complex situations, accommodate others’ viewpoints, and stay on task, are a work in progress into early adulthood.
It is important to understand that young children don't think the same ways adults do. Young children do not have the same grasp of reality as adults, and they see things from their own (often charming) viewpoints. Recall the young child who said, “The moon is following us.” The adult’s supportive response was to comment, “I wonder why,” and enjoy the child’s creative thinking. Helping the child make connections, and not fact-checking, builds brains. An older child considers the idea of the moon following the car pretty lame. But in the meantime, “Good night, Moon.”

3. Think of young children's conflicts as mistaken behaviors, not misbehaviors. A 3-year-old has 36 months of life experience. A 5-year-old has only 60 months. It is an error for adults to think that children misbehave because they “know better” and chosen to do wrong. They are not bad. They are only months old! 

Heck, we adults don't always know how to “behave better.” We work on expressing strong emotions in nonhurting ways our entire lives. Young children are just beginning to learn this complex skill. Children have conflicts and strong disagreements with others, because their incomplete brain development and limited experience means they haven't learned yet how to behave more maturely. 
Think of behaviors usually considered to be misbehaviors as mistaken behaviors. One way to think about a mistake is as an error in judgment that may cause or contribute to a conflict. Like all of us, children make mistakes. Young children make more of them because they are beginners in the learning process. They have yet to develop the personal resources they need to prevent, resolve, and forgive the conflicts all of us tend to fall into.

4. When children have strong conflicts, adults work to teach rather than punish. Research shows that punishment—infliction of pain and suffering as a consequence for something a person has done—harms healthy brain development. Punishment results in the release of stress hormones, in particular cortisol and adrenaline, which then “slosh around” in children’s brains.
Especially when stress reactions continue over time, they cause children to feel threatened even in nonthreatening situations. In reaction to perceived threats, children resort to patterns of fight-or-flight behavior. In such situations, children often show aggression (to their minds, they are defending themselves) and get into even more trouble. Children who bully are showing aggression to assert their wills in the face of life circumstances they have come to see as challenging.
Thus, the effect of punishment is to make it harder for children to learn the very social skills we want all children to learn. A cycle of stress, acting out, punishment, and more stress, starting early in childhood, can cause problems for an individual throughout life.

5. Teach, don't punish. Conflicts do have consequences. There are consequences for children when they make mistakes and cause big conflicts, and there are consequences for the adult as well. The consequence for an adult is to teach the child another way to behave—how to express strong emotions in ways that aren’t harmful. The consequence for a child is to understand the adult’s expectation that he or she learn a better way to behave.
The goal is to move children from hitting and yelling to using more acceptable methods, like saying, “I am angry!” (Just don't expect your child to learn this skill overnight. Expressing strong emotions in nonhurting ways is an ongoing task even for us adults.) 
Always, the first step when children have conflicts is to tend to anyone who is hurt, then calm everyone down, including yourself. Time away from the situation may be important in helping to calm young (and older) family members. This is not time-out, but a cooling-off time so all can calm down, talk about what happened as soon as time can be made, and learn a better way to deal with the situation next time.
It takes hard work for adults to consistently teach rather than punish. Efforts don’t have to be perfect, but they do need to be honest and well intentioned. Adults who use guidance are firm when they need to be—but firm and friendly, not harsh or wishy-washy. To the best of our abilities, we need to model the reasoning and perspective-taking skills we want our children to learn. If children know we love them, even imperfect efforts at guidance can—and do—work. Guidance establishes a foundation children continue to build on, learning how to get along and solve problems as they grow—a foundation for building a healthy state of mind.

6. Use guidance talks. Different from the age-old lecture, a guidance talk is talking with (not at) a child about a conflict. In a guidance talk, the adult acts as a firm but friendly leader, talking with children after all parties have calmed down.
In using guidance talks, first recognize the effort or progress toward emotional restraint your child may have used. For your child to listen to you, you need to convey that you are working with, not against, your child. Work to build your child’s understanding of each person's feelings during the conflict. Discuss what your child could have done instead, what can be done differently next time, and how your child could help the other person feel better.
It is not helpful to force an apology. Instead, when he is ready, ask your child how he can make things better. Most children forgive more easily than adults. They just need a little time to settle themselves and figure out what happened. Restitution and reconciliation are important goals in using guidance. They help us remember that every person is a full and important family member, even when they make mistakes.

7. Hold family meetings to discuss and figure out problems that repeat themselves. The purpose of family meetings is to teach that differences can be discussed in civil (not disagreeable) ways, and that family members can work together to address difficulties and solve problems. 
Be the leader. Know your own mind going into a family meeting and be up front about what you're willing to negotiate and what you’re not. (There’s got to be something, though, or else why meet?) A key to successful family meetings is this: Everyone has a right to have and express their own viewpoint, but it is important to do so in respectful ways. As with guidance talks, start and end the meetings with positives—thank folks for participating and acknowledge effort, progress, and the togetherness of the family.
Family meetings are not always popular, but when an adult emphasizes mutual respect as a guideline, the meetings can reduce, prevent, and resolve strong emotional issues, even with young children. Family meetings make family problems something to talk about and work on together, rather than let problems be the elephant in the room.
  
8. We adults (still) make mistakes. Being a parent who is a caring and positive leader is the hardest job in the world. (Second place is a tie between being a caring and competent early childhood professional and a middle-school substitute teacher!) When we make mistakes in our own behavior, we need to forgive ourselves, forgive the others involved, and learn from the mistakes.
Note, however, when a family member makes a lot of mistakes, has lots of conflicts—consider this a plea for help. Sometimes families need help from outside. This is OK. This difficult step can open the door to a better life for the entire family and help children make progress toward what we all want them to learn and to be.
For me the bottom-line question is this: As our kids get older, what do we want them to do if someone bullies them or pressures them to bully someone else, or (eventually) to experiment with alcohol, drugs, sex, or vandalism? If the answer is to come to us for guidance, then we get it. It’s hard to know how to respond to life’s tough questions, but good relationships with our children, begun when they are infants, will see us through.

Readiness is a State of Mind

Research shows that the best thing we can do to get children ready for school is to form and keep positive relationships with them. Children who are securely attached to their family members accept themselves as worthy individuals. With ongoing family support, they can handle the frustrations, embarrassments, pressures, and successes that come their way. Securely attached children are better able to make friends, work with others, solve problems creatively, learn, and succeed. The best predictor of children's success in school and life is a brain that develops in healthy ways, as a result of their attachments with their family, and especially their parents.


Miss Amy




Amy will be at Peek-A-Boo Playhouse on Thursday mornings to work with a child in the program as his behavioral assistant, helping him be successful in the preschool environment. Amy  is a behavioral assistant with Association of Behavior Consultants in Santa Rosa.  She has a degree in Child and Family Development with an emphasis in infant/toddler development.  She has years of experience working with both typically developing children and children with special needs; ranging from working as a nanny in client’s homes to working as a site director at a preschool. 

Welcome Makenzie


We have a new friend!

So Much Happening....


So Few Pictures


Spelling Names with the Letter Monkeys 
Making Wacky Potato Heads 

A Fort Outside 

Cutting ... Look at how well they are holding their scissors! 
Tracing shamrocks and coloring them "different" designs

JUMPING 

Dr Seuss Hats (They made their own stripes) 

Counting 21 fish 

Graphing March Symbols (each handful is a different number)
Gold Coin Fine Motor 
BUBBLES
Buried Treasure Hunting (mini eraser with tweezers)
Play-doh "cookies"
Using a matching game for pattern inspiration 
Stacking Pegs
List Manager (keeping track of whose turn it is to paint at the easel) a very important job 
Making our own "Go Dog Go" 
A new kind of brush 
Teacher Kaylyn helping with name writing 
Painting with a Q-Tip 
Shamrock Beading / Number Correspondence 

Painting on Bubble Wrap (Red Fish, Blue Fish)












Handbook Guideline: Snack

A bit of background for newer families: The idea of having parents bring something to contribute was created  by the parents a few years ago. I was trying to find a creative way to not raise the tuition rates (which have been the same since Aug 2008), have parents participate more and do so in an economical way for everyone involved. At the time, we had several families who would bring homemade goodies on a regular basis. Unfortunately it was often all on the same day!  The snack calendar was born and it has been going well for a few years. 

Snack Guidelines: 

  • Please bring enough for 12 hungry children
  • If bringing a home-made item please tell us what it is and list ingredients (for food sensitivities or allergies)
  • We have 2 children who are on gluten / wheat free diet and several dairy free kids. If your food is gluten, wheat or dairy free please make note so they can eat what their friends are having
  •  If bringing pre-packaged food Please be aware of the serving size per container (12 or more) 
  • Meal should be ready to be served (fruit washed and cut, sandwiches assembled etc)
  • Cooking projects are always welcome ~ please let us know ahead of time


Cooking: Green Egg and Ham Fritattas 
A link to our snack idea list is always available on the blog. Be creative,think fresh and in season and have fun finding something your child will enjoy.




The Pirate Song




 

The Pirate Song
Learning Made Fun 
Opposites and Rhyming

ENJOY! 
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We love to hear what you think ... 


Wacky Wednesday






It all began

with that shoe on the wall.

A shoe on a wall…?

Shouldn’t be there at all!





We had a-lot of fun today and it DID begin with that shoe on the wall!  We found 12 things that were wacky (not including ourselves and the kids found ways for THEM to be wacky. We crawled, slid down the slide backwards, turned our chairs backwards at circle time, our bodies upside down and had rainbow french toast for snack. Thanks to everyone who participated :)