Showing posts with label early learning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label early learning. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Connecting with our Kids


Pine Village Co-Founders Emma LaVecchia and Brid Martin
This post was written by Emma LaVecchia, Co-Founder of Pine Village Preschool. 

Every now and then, in between all of the office hours, I get the chance to meet with and talk to real live parents (and children) in person, to learn about their experiences at Pine Village and listen to what is important to them. 

Please don’t misunderstand, I am forever grateful for the opportunity to run this business, and deep inside I really love the business aspect of things.  I have learned more than I could have ever imagined, and relish every second.  But if I could ever dream of having the best of all worlds, it would be to spend more time with parents and share what we have learned, and of course learn more from all of them. 

Wednesday night was one of those wonderful and rare “connection” opportunities.  This is the stuff that fuels my tank.  I’m sure it does the same for all of us who are educators at heart, including Brid (the other PV Co-Founder), when we find ourselves missing the “people piece”.

We gathered that evening to help guide a small group of Pine Village parents at one of our locations to start a Parent Committee group, which they hope will, in part, have a positive impact on building community in their school.  This is of course another great passion of ours: to build communities within our schools that nurture lifelong relationships between families and children.  But that’s a whole other topic. 

The moment from that night that has remained with me until now was the discussion about connecting with our own children, and how as parents we want to have a clearer picture of what happens at school in order to know how they spend their day.  This of course was one of the subtopics that generated from the Committee goal of wanting to enhance the experience that their child has each day.  I was reminded in a deep way that connecting with our children isn’t only about collecting facts, knowing schedules, gathering and looking at their projects, knowing what they ate, or which park they went to.  Connecting with our kids is truly about understanding how they feel.  Yes, it’s a right brain AND left brain thing.

As parents, when we want to know how our children are doing, we instinctively look for answers to questions; hard facts, real life examples to show us what our child did that day or week.  We want daily notes, photos, newsletters, projects and emails.  This is our left brain at work.  However, we are often so focused on those pieces – and it takes so much of the time and energy that is at its lowest point when we finally have the chance – that we don’t fully engage the other side, the emotional connections of the right brain.  We often forget to talk – just talk – to our kids.  To ask our children – yes even the very young ones: 

  • “What were you thinking about when you made this picture?”
  • “How were you feeling today at school when your teacher left early?” 
  • “Tell me about who you played with?”
  • “How is your new friend Jane? Why do you like playing with her?” 

It’s not just about the notes and the pictures. We need to focus equally on connecting emotionally with our children.   We need to walk with them on their journey of life, and encourage them to acknowledge the feelings and emotions they experience by asking about them and listening to them about their day.  This is truly how we get to know our children, learn about their day and what they learned and experienced. 

One morning this week as I was driving my 17 year old to high school, he said to me: “Mom, do you know why kids cheat?  It’s because teachers and parents put more emphasis on a grade rather than what we actually know.”  At the time I had three thoughts, 1) “Sad”  2) “That was quite profound for a kid his age.”  And, 3) “I hope he isn’t cheating.”

But his statement had even greater meaning since our parent meeting last week.  It’s truly not only about how many projects the children complete that day, if you received a daily note or if your child read three or four books that day. It is equally about experiencing what our children are experiencing.  About engaging with our children and taking the time to understand this whole other part of their life, from their perspective.  It applies to teachers as well.  We can get so caught up in the daily tasks of the day that we forget to enjoy the kids, to engage with them, to really get involved in their play.

Yes, of course there is a balance.  And in that perfect world we would all be able to have just the right amounts of each.  In reality though, most of us probably need to make the conscious effort to engage and emotionally connect, with our own children in particular, and put aside our expectations and predetermined guide of what we think determines success.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

Spanish Tip – Keeping Spanish Fun!!

A great way to keep children interested in practicing Spanish is to make it fun! Children want to speak and interact with the people they admire and about the things that interest them. Who do they admire most? You! Tie Spanish into family game night or watch a favorite movie in Spanish!

Another fun way to connect with your child in Spanish every day is through a daily personal message. You can put a message in his or her lunchbox or backpack in Spanish. Here are some fun ones to try:

Te quiero mucho.
(Tay Kee-ero Moo-cho)
 I love you very much.
Estoy pensando en ti.
(Eh-stoy Pen-sahn-do En Tee)
 I am thinking about you.
Esta tarde vamos a ____.
(Eh-stah Tar-day Vah-mos ah ____.)
This afternoon we are going to ____.

You can use pictures for beginning readers. Younger children, who aren’t reading yet, can have their teacher read the note for them. It is encouraging and special for your child to share their new language with you!

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Come Sing With Us!


UPDATE: Come join us on 4/6/13 at 10:00 a.m. at our South End school for Launch Party #2! 

This week PVP Education Director Jacie Feinberg unveils her first Spanish-language CD with songs written for the toddler/preschool set. There will actually be several launch parties, the first being tomorrow (Friday, 3/8) at PVP Newton (1326 Washington Street, West Newton) at 10:00 a.m. Bring your kids/family/friends for the sing-along; everyone who attends gets a free CD.

Music has been a part of Jacie Feinberg's life since she was a little girl. She played piano for nine years and took several guitar lessons when she was in seventh grade. Although she and her teacher's style didn't quite mesh, she was determined and ended up teaching herself to play guitar. She's been doing covers and writing original songs ever since. She stopped playing guitar in high school, but picked it up again when she began working in early education in 1998 and incorporated music into her circle times.

"I think it's a wonderful way to bring music to life," she says. "Having the guitar was such a great way to travel and visit other schools." It gave her the chance to bring music to as many kids as she possibly could.

With a background in Spanish education (Jacie started taking Spanish as a seventh grader and has always felt a connection to the language and culture), she started out thinking that she'd be working in the 7th-12th grade range. But in college, as soon as she began a job with a family childcare, she knew that she wanted to focus on the early education piece. She hasn't looked back.

When Jacie joined Pine Village, she started doing weekly music classes in her own school (after a year of being a Pre-K teacher, she became Director of PVP Newton in 2008). Then she branched out and brought her music to other Pine Village schools. After having twin girls, Jacie returned in December 2011 to become Pine Village's first Education Director. The new position showed the growth not just of Jacie, but of Pine Village as well. With eight schools now making up the Pine Village family, part of Jacie's job has been to help unify and systemize the curriculum amongst all of the locations by creating unified templates and ways of presenting the curriculum to all of the PVP families.

She distributes curriculum ideas to all of the staff on a monthly basis as inspiration. And each week, she sends out her “Ideas de Inspiracion” in an internal blog to the teachers that documents what's going on in all of the schools. Topics range from bulletin board design to pictures of each school's dramatic play areas to ideas on how to document each child's progress. The overall common factor, though, is that these tools allow Pine Village to really tap into the wealth of resources from all of the teachers in all of the schools. Jacie also provides curricular support, training for new teachers, and, basically, whatever other support she can provide so that teachers can be at their best every single day. 

It's been a longtime dream of Jacie's to compile the songs she's used in her classes and have a CD as another home/school connector. As she visits all the schools, parents often say to her, 'I want to know the songs. How do I sing these at home?' The CD provides a way for the kids to relate to the language and listen in their cars, but it also allows the parents to learn along with their children.

Although this was part of the reason behind the development of the CD, Jacie has seen the evidence of this firsthand with her own kids. "Ever since I received the CD," she says, "I've listened to it to and from the school every day – because my girls ask for it on the hour commute. They get so excited. Because they listen to it every day, and the songs are so repetitive – which is how they're designed – they anticipate the songs, they know what's next in the order, they repeat the phrases over and over again. And they're 19 months. I see the benefit in the way they are beginning to communicate."

And for those of us who aren't native Spanish speakers? Jacie's mother doesn't speak Spanish at all but through the CD she's picking up phrases and connecting with her granddaughters on that level as well.

The CD has a mix of traditional and original songs – out of a total of thirteen songs, eleven are original. When it comes to her own inspiration, the world is Jacie's oyster, so to speak. "I have a song about a fish who doesn't know how to swim," Jacie says. "Adding that element of silliness to a song makes it memorable for the children. Imagining a fish that doesn't know how to swim, but it knows how to fly, run, jump, sleep, read..."

Jacie wants to get the kids moving, and she likes to use props so that the kids have hands-on experiences. “With the language learning, I feel there's a total physical response (TPR in language-learning circles). The children are associating movements and actions with the words in the songs; it helps them to memorize, to internalize the songs, to start to reproduce and communicate and sing along. The song called "En Mis Botas" is about jumping in different colored boots. As the kids jump along, they sing along.” Using catchy melodies allows children of all ages to be able to connect with the language.

Doing the music is just a component of Jacie's job, but it keeps her connected to the kids and teachers, and, as she says, it fills up her "metaphorical cup of happiness." Getting into the schools, connecting with the kids, having them call her name when she walks in because they're so excited… It's what teaching is all about.

For Jacie, the ability to combine her love of the language of music and of working with young kids has been a dream come true. "I love Pine Village," she says. "I love working for Pine Village. Just to be able to send my girls to such an amazing program – to be able to give my kids the exposure to a foreign language and another culture – is such a gift. I see the results already within my own children."
 
If you can't make it to this week's Launch Party, join us in April (4/6/13, 10:00 a.m.; Pine Village South End) or July (7/2/13, noon; part of the Kendall Square Corporation's FREE Summer Concert Series, 300 Athenaeum Street) instead. Or come to all three!
All events are free and open to the public.

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Is Your Child Ready for Kindergarten?

Although there is still snow (o.k., dirty piles of ice) everywhere on the ground, many of us are looking ahead to September. Happily, my two older kids are set in their same schools for next year -- not always a given with Boston Public Schools! But, as I've mentioned here before, James will be moving out of daycare and into Pine Village in the fall. And many of you are thinking about whether or not your child is ready for kindergarten next year.

Kelly Cisneros, the Director of our Newton school, has recently shared an article from the Scholastic site, "Ready for Kindergarten?" These are some of the traits that the authors talk about:
  • Enthusiasm Toward Learning
  • Solid Oral-Language Skills
  • The Ability to Listen
  • The Desire to Be Independent
  • The Ability to Play Well with Others
  • Strong Fine-Motor Skills
  • Basic Letter and Number Recognition

(Keeping in mind, of course, that ability to, say, listen or play well with others, and willingness to listen are two separate things. :) )

I found this article fascinating to read, especially coming from the perspective of a parent of a 7th grader at Boston Latin, a 4th grader in Advanced Work -- and a highly precocious two-year-old who manages to keep up with both of his older siblings. I love reading books with James at night -- love how he sits back against me and twists my hair around his hand and recites the words to Snuggle Puppy right along with me. Is he reading? No, of course not; I mean, I'm pretty sure he's brilliant, but he's not quite there yet. But, as they talk about in the article, he's building language skills. He's making connections between the book in front of him and the words that lie within it. He's putting together a+b and coming up with... Well, o.k., 'ab' isn't really a word, but you know what I mean.

One of the things that has always struck me about Pine Village, though, has been how much gets packed into every day -- what gets packed into the overall experience. It's not just the tangible skills such as learning numbers and letters and how to write one's own name; those are a given. But in a way, those are the least important skills that our kids learn there every day.

Don't get me wrong, now. Of course those are important skills. Giving your child a head start on those skills is one of the main reasons you chose pre-school over all of the other options out there. But take a look at some of those other bullet points: enthusiasm toward learning. Ability to play well with others. Desire to be independent.

Sound familiar?

Thinking back to Lucy's first day of kindergarten just drives this all home. Leaving Pine Village is hard -- really hard. And in those days leading up to the first day of kindergarten, you wonder how you're possibly going to leave your child with someone who isn't Alicia or Adrienne or Rocio or (name your teacher here). But then you approach that school with the line of kids wearing their first-day-of-school best and standing underneath those bunches of balloons as their new teacher smiles and shakes her head when you ask if you can just come in for a minute or so. And you look at your child and think what can I do that will make this day easier for her so that she doesn't miss everything that's come before?

Then she smiles and waves and turns away, already giggling at the joke one of her new classmates has told. (I'd tell you that it was probably a joke that involved poop in some way, but that would take away from the bigger message of my story. And anyway you totally already know it was.)

Because she was so excited -- enthusiastic, I dare say, to be there at the Big Kid school. And she already knew that everyone was going to play well with her because, darn it, she knew exactly what that meant, thanks to Pine Village, and she was going to make sure they all knew too. And because it wasn't just a desire to go out there and do it on her own, it was pretty much a given that that was exactly what she was going to do. Flash forward to this past September and her first day at Boston Latin and, with the exception of the poop jokes (or, at least, I assume that to be the case), it was pretty much the same.

So I say thank you to Alicia and Adrienne and Rocio and (name your teacher here) for instilling the idea that school can be fun. For teaching them the rules of playing well with others -- and that occasionally there's a reason to skirt around them. And for encouraging that streak of independence rather than break it.
 

If you're wondering about your child's kindergarten readiness, definitely take a look at this article; it's at http://www.scholastic.com/parents/resources/article/what-to-expect-grade/ready-kindergarten.

Monday, February 18, 2013

Spanish Tip: Science Fair Word Practice


Since February is Science month here at Pine Village, why not practice some words that you might be using at our upcoming science fair!  We've made some suggestions below. 

Science Process Skills

English
Español
Experiment
Experimento
Investigate
Investigar
Predict      
Predecir
Observe    
Observar
Procedure 
Procedimiento
Scientist   
Científico

Weather

English
Español
Cloud
Nube
Wind
Viento       
Meteorologist
Meteorólogo
Precipitation
Precipitación
Season
Estación
Thermometer
Termómetro
Blizzard
Tempestad de nieve


Measurements

English
Español
Estimate
Estimar
Explore
Explorar
Measurement
Medida
Ruler
Regla
Length
Longitud
Width
Ancho

Solids and liquids

English
Español
Fluid                
Fluido
Viscous 
Viscoso
Mixture
 Mezcla
Float    
 Flota
Liquid   
 Liquido
Solid    
 Solido
Sink     
 Hundirse
Matter 
 Materia


Leave us a comment to let us know what other science-themed blog posts you'd like to see this month!