Friday, February 25, 2011

Importance of PLay

Here is a good article to peruse on how play is essential to early childhood development from The Chronicle of Higher Education.

Thursday, October 21, 2010

FEL Demonstration Sites



We just finished round two of our Foundation for Early Learning "Train the Trainers" in Huntington this week. Vermont is in the last year of a three year grant to build a cadre of people who can train Early Childhood professionals in Early Literacy and Positive Behavior Supports. Dr. Tweety Yates from the University of Illinois has been the Vermont Trainer from the Center for Social Emotional Foundations for Early Learning (CSEFEL) and Allison Jones has been the Vermont trainer from the Center for Early Literacy Learning (CELL)

On Wednesday at the training, Kate Rogers and Maureen Sullivan from the Vermont Department of Education, along with Dr. Yates, announced that Barlow Street Preschool and Highgate Laboratory Preschool will be CSEFEL demonstration sites in Franklin County. These two preschool programs will be implementing the principles of CSEFEL's research-based practices. As more early childhood providers across the region become trained in CSEFEL, they can visit these two sites to see what it looks like when Positive Behavior Supports are practiced program-wide. 
Pictured above from left to right, Maureen Sullivan, Beth Richey (Highgate Laboratory Preschool teacher), Andrea Racek (Barlow Street Preschool Teacher), Dr. Tweety Yates, and Kate Rogers.

Saturday, August 14, 2010

One more Reason for the iPad for Teaching

Here is a link my friend in Shelburn shared about how the iPad can be useful for assisting students with special needs.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Vermont FEL Training

A bunch of educators from our team just completed the Foundations for Early Learning (FEL) train the trainers this week. We are now ready to bring the research-based strategies from the Center for Early Literacy Learning (CELL) and the Center for Social Emotional Foundations of Early Learning (CSEFEL) back to our parents, classrooms, partner sites, and early intervention programs.

CELL will help us teach people who interact with young children as caregivers, teachers, and parents how to build literacy rich environments and play with infants, toddlers, and young children in a way that supports early language and literacy development. These strategies are both in the form of formal teaching and informal, routines-based ideas. The principles of CELL can be used in classrooms, home childcares, and by parents. The website looks at the entire continuum of language and literacy development and shows how it can be supported in practice guides for infants, toddlers, and preschoolers.

CSEFEL will help us give strategies to providers, parents, and teachers to promote social competence in young children. The emphasis is on how adults interact with children, rather than "fixing the child," and understanding that behavior is communication. It is based on a pyramid model. The base of the pyramid is about supportive relationships and environments. This is the prerequisite for the next step. The next tier is about systematic and intentional teaching strategies to support social-emotional growth in children. It emphasizes how to teach social skills in order to help children manage their own behavior.

We are excited to be working with the whole of the Franklin County/Grand Isle Region to come up with a plan to train as many early care providers and parents of young children in these wonderful research based models for supporting children's language, literacy, and social emotional development.

Sunday, June 6, 2010

Summer Plans

Here's a nice idea for families this summer. The Vermont State Parks is sponsoring a summer program for you and your family to participate in outdoor activities. You document your activities with photos and then you get points for each of them. When you accumulate 250 points, you receive a free "Golden Pass" to the state parks, which includes the rest of this summer and next. 

Here is the website with all of the information:

Have fun getting out there this summer!

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

NAEYC Conference

I am bursting with things to share from the National Association for the Education of Young Children Conference in Washington DC last week. I am most excited about the new technology finds from two excellent sessions I attended on bringing technology to children and teachers.
We are already using a blog in our classroom, but now I know about http://www.glogster.com, a place to combine pictures, audio and words. I plan on playing with it to figure out how to help my students make their own contributions.
Next, I learned about Bee-bots. These are little programmable robots that move 15cm for each programmed step. So, you can press forward, forward, left, forward and it will move 30 cm forward, 15 cm to the left and another 15 cm forward. By using mats that are blocked off in 15cm grids, you can program the bee-bot to follow a path. The kids are learning basic programming and robotics. You can also make the grids learning tools by putting, shapes, numbers, or anything else in the grids and challenge the kids to program the bee-bot to get to the right one.
There is also a Web 2.0 program called voicethread. This lets you post an image or video and comment on it. Then, others can come in and also add comments. There are multiple ways to input--you can comment by recording to your microphone, telephone, text, record on the voicethread site or use your webcam. This tool allows you to have a conversation about something with multiple inputs. I am just beginning to devise ways to use this tool. I am thinking of just putting up a "story starter" photo and having the kids comment on what they think the story could be.

I also learned about SimplyBox, which I have since found out is a lot like the application Delicious (which I have never used, but plan on investigating). With SimplyBox, you can visually organize  websites. I thought this might be a great way to organize places for kids to visit on the web. I could have a math box, an animals box, and a letters box. The kids would have a visual to navigate, instead of just words, which is all bookmarks have.
Then, there is Create-A-Graph. This place is amazing. You can survey your kids with a simple question, like "Do your shoes have laces, velcro, or slip on?" Then, when you have the answers, you can input the data and make a pie, bar, line, area, or XY graph. It is a great way to create a visual for the information you collect from your students.  There is some research that suggests kids should be exposed to visual charts and data early in order to better to understand it later.

When I plow through my notes and find the other sites, I will post again. I am going to include a link to Arnie Duncan, our US Secretary of Education, Dancing to Greg and Steve.
Enjoy!






SS 

Thursday, August 6, 2009

Technology in Early Education?

I have spent the last three days at the VPA Leadership Academy in Killington and have participated in the "Technology and Differentiation" Strand with Jim Moulton. I have a lot of new tools in my tool box to share with staff and am not sure what the best way to do that is. We are almost to the point that all of our staff have lap tops and more and more of our meeting spots have WiFi so maybe a county wide meeting with laptops would work for us?

My other thoughts other than the "how" is the "why". I know there are a lot of different philosophies about technology in the early education classroom. I hear things like "We only have ten hours with them and they spend enough time in front of screens at home, they don't need to do that here too." Or "we are here to teach foundational skills and social skills, we don't need technology to do that in early ed."

I have been trying to find some innovative early education programs who are using technology as one tool to intentionally teach kindergarten readiness skills. I am not really finding one although I would love to put something together based on what I am seeing as I travel to different classrooms in our early ed collaborative. Some supporting sites that I have found are:

http://www.projectapproach.org/
http://pbl-online.org/
http://jimmoulton.org/1.html (links to many many resources)
http://www.edutopia.org/technology-overload
http://www.newamerica.net/blog/early-ed-watch/2008/making-most-early-education-technology-1597