WF Friday 11/30 Friday Wrap-Up

 

As the teachers OWLed (Observed, Watched and Listened) this week, here’s a bit of what we’ve seen:

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  • Max and Finn are in Pirate Mania. Over the last several days, they have donned pirate hats and worn pirate gear. They also spend time ice skating around the housekeeping table with house slipper skates.
  • Marina and Elizabeth (and sometimes Lea and Marta) have spent countless hours this week applying makeup, the natural way. Long pieces of bark serve as brushes. Sand has been the blush of choice and dark, wet soil has been lipstick. (we keep close watch on the soil!)
  • Jada (and Marina, Sloane and Lea) spend a lot of their time in housekeeping. Jada works with diapers, putting them off and on continuously, and all the girls practice dressing the dollies, rocking them and taking care of them. They usually wear shoes and various costume pieces during their imaginative play.

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  • Arleigh seems to have created a rock band. We’ve seen Jane, Macy and Sophie participate in the group, and we’ve heard all of them singing original (we think!) songs. They use a magnetic sphere and rod as a microphone and a stool as their stage.
  • Sophie spends most of her time playing with the older girls and they take care of her well.

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  • Ellie can always be found reading a book and gravitates to whomever is reading aloud. She is a great conversationalist and this week, has talked several times about how beautiful the day is or how she is thinking about mom and dad. She has taken to riding her favorite trike on a regular basis.
  • Elliott, Marta and Sloane have spent a lot of time this week working with dump trucks outside. They push them around the yard, shifting work locations regularly. They fill up the trucks with sand and dirt and sticks. They hide the trucks, dump the trucks and today they had a “truck party”. They refer to all of this as their “work”.

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  • Ada is the keeper of the Grinch. He’s in the house and Ada takes care of him. This week, she has been very interested in listening to music (making song requests) as she swings in the hammock.
  • Nate, Max and Finn have spent much of their time this week building: they build pirate boats with large wooden blocks, sand castles and tunnels with logs, buckets and shovels. They build forts in the reading area with the pillows and more forts outside with plastic bins and the plastic see saws.

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Wee Sprouts: Pea pods. Breakfast: Kashi and pear slices. Lunch: Whole grain flat bread with melted cheese, broccoli and pear slices. Snack: Yogurt and animal crackers.

Have a great weekend.

WWF, 11/29/2012

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Good Afternoon.

To spruce up the classroom, we’re making a Christmas tree! It will be a multi-step project and take many days to complete.

Step 1: Use a BIG white sheet of paper and splatter/paint/dab green paint onto it! This will be our Christmas tree.

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We got on our hands and knees and used mops to paint with. Children made sure to paint the white areas and move their bodies around so they could paint as much as possible.

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We did get some green paint on our hands and feet Smile. But we did a great job and our 1st step is complete!

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Group projects are fantastic!

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Zoey and Emma enjoyed reading some of their favorite books this morning.

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We got our winter gear on and headed outside! Clara asked for “bikes” so we sat and waited patiently as the bikes were retrieved from the garage.

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Friends pushed with their legs while working on their balancing skills.

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P.K. kept Lu Lu company on the floor. He stroked her hand softly.

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Clara talked to Mommy and Daddy on the pretend phone! Our friends love using the phone to talk to friends or family when they miss them.

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For breakfast, children had bagels with cinnamon and oranges. Lunch consisted of whole grain rice with chicken, apples, and mixed vegetables. PM snack was hard boiled eggs and string cheese.

Have a great night!

-Mindy

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WF Thursday 11/29

Friends created music for a very long time today. It started with an impromptu caroling rehearsal. We sang loud and strong and accompanied ourselves with jingle bells. We moved on to working with rhythm sticks. We found soft/hard places to tap our sticks. We tapped them loudly, softly and with a medium volume. Then we added Hap Palmer’s “Tap Your Sticks”.  We passed out all of our instruments and took song requests. We explored time signature and tempos by counting along to the music. We ended our music making with our usual meditation.

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We took yesterday’s painting project to the next level today by creating a Christmas tree and adding a sparkly garland.

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We watched Finn exercise tremendous determination as he worked at getting a nail out of a board.

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Tami set out a round wreath with fabric scraps and friends worked at tying the fabric around the wreath.

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Jane, Arleigh and Sophie have been practicing their rock band for a few days now. A few of the lyrics that were being sung were “oh Sister…..oh sister….”

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Our holiday mail box has come out and this week we’ve been watching as friends deliver, sort, cut out and glue holiday cards. Opening and closing the mailbox is the center of many friend’s work.

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We gathered around our lighted tree for a final rehearsal before heading outside.

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Wee Sprouts: Pea pods and cucumbers. Breakfast: Corn Chex and bananas. Lunch: Whole grain rice with chicken, corn and apple slices. Snack: Goldfish and raisins.

Have a great day.

WF Wednesday 11/28

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We just got power back at 4:15, so we are just sharing some shots from this morningSmile

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Wee Sprouts: Pea pods. Breakfast: Applesauce Malt-O-Meal. Lunch: Egg Salad, peas and pear slices. Snack: Cheddar cheese and crackers.

WWF, 11/28/2012

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Good Afternoon!

We had an exciting day (power outage in the afternoon)! However, we do have a few illnesses going through Wee Wee Friends at this time. We have one child with the flu and two confirmed cases of pneumonia.

While some of our friends were at home resting and getting better, the Wee Wee’s had a great day!

Friends interacted with one another on the jungle gym! It’s a great activity for friends who want to test their limits and try new things. Eren loved going down the slide on his belly!

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Eren looked out the window and saw a dog! He said, “Ruff, Ruff!”

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We had a great sensorial morning! At first, we were a little hesitant. This white stuff (shaving cream) is different. It feels funny. It’s a whole new experience!

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However, we dove right in! We had it on our hands, faces, and clothing (even with smocks on)! Friends squished it in their hands and found out that it made funny noises!

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Man, did we have fun! Smile

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Zoey migrated to the cube again where she enjoyed alone time. She tossed and turned on a soft pillow. She’s the only friend who can stand up in the cube without bonking her head Smile.

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For breakfast, children had malto-meal and pears. Lunch consisted of egg salad, whole wheat tortillas, peas, and pears. PM snack was rice cakes with soy butter and pears.

Have a terrific evening!

-Mindy

WWF, 11/27/2012

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Good Afternoon.

“Vroom!” That’s how our morning started off: fast and on the move! P.K. pushed cars across the floor and made several car noises as he was doing this.

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After children were done playing with the cars, as a group, we built a train track. Friends shared the cars and trains with one another. There were a few times where the train would come undone and P.K. made sure to put it back together.

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We had a great time doing this group activity. Friends took turns putting trains on the train track.

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We set up tempera paint in the kitchen where children took turns at the art easel.

P.K. took his brush and pushed down on the paper. When he did this, the paint squirted off his paint brush and onto the paper. He also enjoyed making lines while using soft strokes.

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Daniel made sure to look carefully at each paint color before he used it on his paper. He looked into each cup full of paint.

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Eren dabbed his paint brush on the paper. He enjoyed looking at all of the different colors that were available to paint with.

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Eve was soft and gentle as she painted on her paper. She looked down and realized she had paint on her hands! She finished painting and then we went to the sink and washed the paint off Smile.

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Clara studied her work hard. As the paint went onto the paper, she watched it carefully and made sure to use most of the paper available. The different strokes that she used allowed her artwork to be different on each paper that she painted.

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Friends P.K. and Eren sat with one another as they built a train. Eren handed P.K. different parts to the train as P.K. assembled it.

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We were so gentle with babies this morning. Each friend got a baby and a blanket. They wrapped the baby up, burped the baby, or fed the baby. Clara said, “Shh..baby sleeping.”

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Our smallest Wee Wee friend enjoyed time on her boppy as she played with different toys. Her reach is getting better everyday!

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For breakfast, children had blueberry muffins and oranges. Lunch consisted of turkey sandwiches on whole wheat bread, banana, and snap peas. PM snack was string cheese and animal crackers.

Have a great night.

-Mindy

WF Tuesday 11/27

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Wee Sprouts: Carrots. Breakfast: Oatmeal and fresh fruit. Lunch: Turkey sandwiches on whole wheat bread, pea pods and banana/pineapple fruit salad. Snack: Cottage cheese and apple slices.

Have a great day.

WWF, 11/26/2012

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Happy Monday!

Hope everyone had a great holiday weekend! It was wonderful to get back into the swing of things Smile.

We started our Monday off with story time. Friends got back into the routine after being home for a long weekend!

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As the music was playing, children asked for the circular rings. Friends put them on the floor, around their head, and their arms. We counted them and talked about the colors of each ring.

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Zoey spent time in the cube area full of pillows. She loved the feeling of the pillows on her body. While rolling around in the cube, she played with blocks.

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P.K. spent time making a train track. He made sure to tell friends “mine” as he played. We’re working on telling our friends “mine” or “no thank you” when we’re playing by our self.

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Children gathered on the jungle gym area where we worked on gross motor skills. Laughing and smiling took place as we jumped up and down.

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Daniel and P.K. worked on a puzzle together. Each child took a piece and placed it into the correct spot in the puzzle board.

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Our littlest friend enjoyed various tummy time activities such as on the boppy and on Ms. Marty’s lap! She has found her tongue and is having a blast exploring it!

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Clara clapped her hands as she twirled around while dancing to music. P.K joined in by bouncing up and down.

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For breakfast, children had bagels with cinnamon and pears. AM snack was string cheese. Lunch consisted of pasta with pork and black beans, oranges, and cucumbers. PM snack was blueberry muffins and pears.

Hope everyone has a terrific evening!

-Mindy

WF Daily Exploration, Monday 11-26-12, “Spoiled Brats”

001With Miss Laurie still out enjoying her Thanksgiving time with her family in Georgia, my blog time is short today.  So, with the coming Christmas holiday time nearing and the focus on “naughty or nice”, I wanted to use the blog to share one of my favorite Teacher Tom blogs:

“Spoiled Brats” by Teacher Tom

Whenever I write or talk about treating children as if they are fully formed humans and not just incomplete adults, like I did yesterday, there are some who ask me about (or even accuse me of) “spoiling” the kids. They then go on to tell me horror stories about how permissive parents have let their rotten kids take over their lives, bossing them around, dominating their households, terrorizing their peers, and frustrating their teachers.
It’s hard, I think, for some people to understand the world without a hierarchical framework: someone has to be the boss — if it’s not the parent, it’s the child. When I suggest paying attention to the words we use with children, avoiding thelanguage of command, and instead choosing statements of fact which allow children to practice taking responsibility for their own actions, I understand how some people fear that it will become a slippery slope down which the whole carefully constructed family org chart will slide. I understand how it might seem that if you’re not bossing your child, she will take advantage, gain the upper hand, and assume the scepter. To believe this takes a view of human nature that I’ve not found to be true, but I understand it.
So let me state right here: I’m all for fewer “spoiled” children in the world (although I’d like us to retire that label along with “bully,” “aggressive,” and “shy“).  These children are characterized as self-centered and demanding, inconsiderate of others, see their needs as most important, and will resort to often extreme behavior to get their way. These are not happy children and they tend to grow into unhappy adults who struggle with relationships, have a hard time holding jobs, and are generally miserable to be around.
The common wisdom, it seems, is that these behaviors come from not enough “tough love;” from parents who are afraid of their children, and are too namby-pamby to put their foot down, an approach popularized by such pop-psychology sensations as Dr. Phil. Sadly, this is not what psychologists who actually do research have found. So-called “spoiled” behaviors,” in fact, result from things like not enough proactive attention from parents, not expecting children to do things for themselves, and a lack of clear limits, not a dearth of bossy parents.

Not enough proactive attention
The best parenting advice I ever got was from my mother, who said, “All children want is attention. If you don’t give it to them, they’ll take it.” And indeed children, from the moment they are born, are designed to get attention from the adults around them. From a biological point of view, this makes perfect sense: they are born utterly incapable of keeping themselves alive, except to the degree that they can get adult humans to feed, clothe, and protect them. This instinct doesn’t go away as they get older. When they feel ignored, they correct that problem through tantrums, whining, clinging, and other “spoiled” behaviors. They don’t really care if the attention they get is negative or positive, frankly, they are just biologically driven to get your attention. So for your own sanity (and to avoid “spoiling” your child), I’d suggest proactively giving them the kind of attention you choose, because otherwise they’ll choose it for you and you’re probably not going to like it.
Doing too much for your kids
Awhile back, I met a women who works in the admissions department at the University of Washington here in Seattle. She told me that increasingly freshmen are showing up on campus without such basic life skills as using can openers, cooking on a stovetop, and operating a washing machine. She said the problem is so bad that many universities have had to institute remedial life skills classes. Instead of learning to do things for themselves, “spoiled” kids have turned to mastering the skills required to get things done for them, which will often look a lot like being self-centered, demanding, and even tyrannical. So for your own sanity (and to avoid “spoiling” your child), I’d suggest teaching him to do as much for himself as his age and abilities will allow.
Lack of clear limits
As Goethe wrote, “It is within limitations that he first shows himself the master.” This is where we all agree, and we can all point to examples of parents, who in the sincere interest of teaching their children independence or giving them “freedom,” err on the side of a household in which anything goes. This is not a good environment for children. It tends to make them feel nervous, uncertain, and to generally demonstrate “spoiled” behaviors.
Where we tend to disagree is in how we create those limitations and how we work with those limitations.  I suppose the traditional model is for parents to lay down the law and create a system of punishments for violations. It doesn’t have to be that way. In our school, for instance, all of the rules are made by the children themselves, through a process of consensus. In a decade of doing it this way, the adults have never found the need to dictate rules beyond those the children create, indeed, if anything we find we need to moderate many of their more extreme legislative efforts. Our process is one that many of Woodland Park’s families have adopted in their own homes, keeping a running list of family rules on the refrigerator door to refer to as needed.
Do children break the rules? Of course they do. The adults, however, don’t need to then punish them to do the job of teaching about limitations. Instead our job as adults is to point to the list of rules and say, “You and your friends agreed . . .
So what do you do if a child keeps breaking a rule?  Certainly there’s a consequence, a punishment.  If we do that, if we resort to punishment we put the focus on the punishment and the punisher, rather than where we want it to be, on the behavior. Instead we do what makes sense, we just keep reminding them until they remember on their own. No one would think of punishing a child for not, say, remembering her A-B-C’s; we would patiently keep working with her until she got it. Why should teaching about limits be any different?
In other words, children aren’t “spoiled” because they haven’t been sufficiently bossed around by adults.

Creating a world of facts, instead of a world of commands
A mistake many of us make (and one of the things that drives critics of this approach crazy) is to mistakenly think that all of this means that everything is open to negotiation, that our child gets to decide such things as when to get dressed, whether or not they go to the doctor, or where the family will eat dinner. In our effort to be super parents, we forget that we adults are fully formed humans as well. Our opinions, needs, and emotions are not made lesser because we seek to honor those of the child, but are rather equal, and to the degree that they diverge from those of our child, must often take precedence.
There are also realities of which we are aware that our children are not: schedules, for instance, courtesy to others, safety. Sometimes we must insist that we know best, but that doesn’t mean we need to use the language of command. Statements of fact are not commands, such as:
     “It’s time to go.”
     “What you said hurt her feelings.”
     “If you do that you might die.”
I statements that convey our opinions or feelings are also statements of fact, such as:
     “I don’t want to be late.”
     “I feel sad when she’s crying.”
     “I don’t want you to die.”
Factual statements about the child’s behavior can also be very powerful, such as:
     “You seem upset that it’s time to go.”
     “You sounded angry when you said that to her.”
     “If you keep doing that you might die and that will probably hurt.”
And factual statements about your own responsibilities are also important, such as:
     “I can’t stay because daddy is expecting us.”
     “I can’t let you say hurtful things to her.”
     “I can’t let you cross the street by yourself.”
Creating a world of facts instead of a world of commands gives children the opportunity to come to their own conclusions about their behavior, to make their own decisions about right and wrong, or to at least understand why this is one of those times when they don’t get what they want. These kinds of experiences lead to a sense of responsibility, empathy, and confidence, characteristics that are the opposite of those that characterize a “spoiled” child.
Everyone’s goal is a child who understands her own emotions, treats others with respect, and knows how to assess her own risks. These are all vital skills to success in life. When we boss our kids into these behaviors, we’re not giving them a chance to learn anything we want them to learn; we’re just forcing them to do something because “I said so.” It’s effective in the moment, but it teaches nothing except, perhaps, obedience — a very dangerous habit in adulthood. When we, on the other hand, help our children see the “facts” surrounding their behaviors and choices, we allow them to actually practice these skills. Of course, they will make mistakes, just the way a carpenter has to hit his thumb a few times before he learns to use a hammer, and it might be frustrating or embarrassing for you as the parent, but experience is the only way anyone ever learns anything.

I know it sounds like a lot of work. It is, indeed, much easier to boss people around. It’s hard to overcome deeply rooted habits of thought.  But it does get easier with practice. And the results are worth it.
That’s how to treat your child with respect without spoiling him.

http://teachertomsblog.blogspot.com/2011/08/spoiled-brats.html

For breakfast we had cheerios and apple slices.  For WeeSprouts we had celery.  Lunch was egg noodles with pork, cucumbers and fresh orange slices. 

 

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WWF, 11/21/2012

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Happy Wednesday!

**Just a reminder, we are closed Thursday and Friday for Thanksgiving. Have a happy and safe holiday weekend! We’ll see you back here Monday, November 26th!

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Clara worked with puzzles this morning. She pointed to the multiple puzzles that are on the shelf and said, “help!” When she finished the puzzle that she was working on, she did her happy dance!

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P.K. joined her and they worked on puzzles with one another.

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Smiles and happiness filled our air today. Maybe they knew it was a short week? (more family time) Smile

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Friends joined our littlest friend on the floor as they bonded and had some relaxing time.

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Emma read her favorite book for quite some time: The Wheels On The Bus!

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Jump, Jump, Jump!

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High in the air! Reach for the sky!

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Emma enjoyed working in the log house using pebbles and sticks. She built an extravagant building with her materials.

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We went on a hunt. Through the woods back to Wee Wee Friends we go!

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Our littlest friend loved watching the fish swim by her.

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For breakfast, children had malto-meal and banana. AM snack was string cheese. Lunch consisted of chicken strips, pears, and green peas. PM snack was goldfish and raisins.

Have a terrific weekend!

-Mindy

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