Friday, October 20, 2017

The Apple Orchard



The apple orchard has encouraged many fun conversations over the past few weeks.  However, it has also given the preschoolers many opportunities to practice a variety of math skills.  They have been picking apples and sorting them into groups by color, shape, size, real/pretend apples & even by stem/no stem.  The preschoolers have also been counting apples, graphing apples and making ABAB patterns with real and pretend apples.  Lastly, the preschoolers have enjoyed using a balancing scale  weigh the apples & compare them as well as to sell the apples to their friends. 

Last week, we had an apple/apple products tasting party.  We tasted over 14 different apple products as well as a variety of fresh apple slices!  Their favorite apple items were the apple slices, the applesauce and the apple juice. Yum!  Overall, it's been a delicious learning experience for all.










Howdy folks...here are some pics from the farm

   

 


There is something special about the uniqueness of a child's artwork


Each week in preschool, we work on various areas of development.  One area that is extremely important for the preschoolers to practice is that of fine motor control.  Fine motor control is imperative for accomplishing self care skills independently.  (Some examples of self care skills are:  opening a lunch box, zipping/unzipping a coats, buttoning buttons, tying shoe laces, holding eating utensils or writing utensils independently, etc.) 

While we work on these skills in a variety of ways around the classroom, we always work on these skills when completing our weekly, visual arts projects.  In preschool, we choose our art projects based on the students' language targets.  We model and use appropriate language structures during our visual arts lessons.  However, we are also working on important, functional communication skills and social skills during this time.  Additionally, the visual arts lessons give us the opportunity to expose the preschoolers to variety of art materials, textures and smells that they might come across in their environment. 

After the art projects are completed, we encourage the preschoolers to give their friends positive feedback or compliments.  We try to focus on the efforts of each child, not necessarily on the finished product.  However, this is a learning process that takes time to master.  Lastly, we hang their artwork around the classroom to show that we appreciate their efforts, their uniqueness and to give them another reason to talk to one another.  Don't worry, at the end of the month, you will receive your child's original works of art to display at home.  :)

In the end, I truly love looking at the artwork of young children.  A child's artwork can highlight their uniqueness, their strengths, their emotions and it can also tell you a lot about their overall development.  While the preschoolers may not paint like Monet at this point in their lives, we can encourage them to do their best & to work on their fine motor control in the process.
 
 


 


Language Experience









In life, it's easier to talk about something that you are familiar with or about something that you have done, than to talk about something that you have never experienced.  This is exactly what we aim to accomplish in the oral preschool class.  During an activity that we call language experience, we aim to give our students, real-life experiences that they can talk about at home or anywhere else.

Each experience provides the preschoolers with an activity that will encourage them to communicate effectively with their peers & other adults using spoken language.  During the activity, the preschoolers are exposed to the language of many different smells and tastes as well as other sensory input.  We also model our language in a way that encourages our students to communicate with others effectively.  In the end, because our students have actively participated in this activity, they should be able to talk about the experience with others.

While the activity is the same for each child, the instructional goals are individualized so that the entire experience is purposeful and challenging for each student based on his or her current language level.  The speech pathologists and I carry out these language experiences in a small group on Wednesdays & Fridays.  The lessons are planned to compliment our class's monthly themes so that the preschoolers have extra exposure to our targeted vocabulary words.  While we don't always have a tangible product at the end of the experience, we take pictures of the process to include in a book that will go home with each child.  Please read this book with your child and see how much he/she can tell you about the experience. 

Here are a few examples of some of our preschoolers' finished products.  Remember, it's all about the process and the learning experience itself, not the final product.  :)


  




Thursday, October 19, 2017

Let's Visit the Pet Shop



During the month of September, the preschoolers had the opportunity to learn more about language by playing in the pet shop-themed learning center.  We worked on many goals each day including vocabulary, literacy, math, personal/social skills and even science.  Over the course of the month, it was exciting to see the preschoolers' play skills develop to a new level.  Instead of only acting out the various jobs that one might accomplish at a pet store, the preschoolers began to interact with one another using the language that was appropriate for this setting!  While they did learn about caring for pets and about purchasing a new pet, the preschoolers really learned some important lessons for life and about communicating with others.

Over the course of the month, the preschoolers had their favorite pets.  Interestingly enough, that changed from day to day due to our literature selections.  For instance, if the main character of the story was a bird, the preschoolers all wanted to play with the birds in the pet shop.  And, if the main character of the story was a rabbit, they all wanted to purchase & care for a rabbit.  To me, this was very exciting because it showed that the preschoolers were not only listening to the stories, but they were later, synthesizing this information through their play.  While playing looks fun to adults, it provides powerful learning opportunities for young children to investigate and explore the world around them.