When Children Have the Freedom To “Be”

While this is a post I wrote about play performances with children, it is really about far more.  Oh, yes!  It is about believing and taking risks.  It is about freedom and encouragement.  It’s my philosophy of teaching. 

Paying attention to children and what they like is the key to their greatest learning experiences.  It’s called emergent curriculum, and this is much like how it happens:

“Imagine being on a quest with a group of children, walking through the woods, and suddenly discovering something shiny on the ground.  You pause to look, brush away the dirt and leaves, and uncover a hatch.  You stop, knowing the excitement is just the beginning, and ask questions.  Oh, those “W” questions lead to hours of wondering and predictions.  At last, you open the hatch and discover there is no darkness.  There is light and a beautiful stairway, leading to the joy of learning.”

In order for emergent curriculum to happen like this, I have to be open and let my instincts be my guide.  Of course, it is the children who always start the ball rolling.  And, a play performance can often be that shiny hatch, what the children want when they are involved in learning.

We studied Fairy Tales recently; reading stories, telling stories, writing stories, using props, learning about different characters.  The children deemed Goldilocks a “not-listener”.  They were right.  We then voted on the Fairy Tales we liked the best, and one was The Three Little Pigs.

The children were interested in the story and the characters.  After reading different versions, we debated on what the wolf really did.  Did he eat the pigs, or did each pig rush to the house of his brother when the wolf was huffing-and-puffing?  Hands down, the popular choice was the pigs running away.  So, the only thing left to do, in order to make this thinking and studying work, was to become the characters ourselves.  That meant a play performance.

After all, isn’t that what a good book ultimately does?  The reader becomes the characters.

Costumes?  Oh, no.  The only thing we needed were the pig’s houses.

We placed the straw house and the stick house atop our classroom tables, and the brick house alongside our loft.  Children chose to be pigs, wolves, and sellers.  Then, I stood back and watched amazing things happen.

Jayden, one of the quiet and younger children, and only three-and-a-half years old, decided to be a seller.  When the pigs came to buy his straw, he belted out, “I don’t think that’s a good idea!”  When the next group of pigs came to buy his sticks, he said, “That is NOT a good idea”, with the confidence and determination of a real seller of sticks.  I could hardly believe it.

Wolves and pigs nailed the words they wanted to say, and became the characters.  Even the old sow, the mother pig, had a grand performance.

Why did this play work?  There were no costumes, no set lines to say, just the children wanting, needing to do this in order to go along that stairway in the light, under the hatch.

I have watched far too many plays with nervous children worrying if they mess-up their lines, and plays that focus on the costumes.  It makes me sad.  It has nothing to do with learning and developing self-esteem.  What do children really need to experience?  Self-esteem, bravery, and joy.  Those will be their foundation.  I know this to be true; it all started with Kevin…

Kevin was what teachers refer to as an “observer”, a child who watches others, usually at a bit of a distance.  He was painfully shy.  Even talking with his teachers was not easy for him.  Kevin was in my summer camp group, and we did a play performance at the end of each camp session.  Kevin decided he wanted to be a dog in the play.  We sneaked into the storage room so children could pick anything they wanted to make their own costume.  Kevin found a piece of brown card stock paper, cutting out a small triangle.

“It’s my tail”, he exclaimed with a satisfied look on his face. “Do you need anything else?” I asked.  “No, I’m all set.”

When the play began, Kevin walked onto that stage with tall shoulders and a big smile.  Of course, no one could see the tail, but that didn’t matter.  Kevin knew it was there.  He was terrific in the play.  We did another play, with children wanting to sing “The Star-Spangled Banner.”  That is one difficult song!  Yet, the group was sure, mainly because one boy was quite a gifted singer.  The plan was to have him in the front, and the other children behind him holding the American flag.  We practiced.  It worked.

As we lined up behind the curtain, ready to begin, the boy panicked and refused to sing.  He was in tears.  Before I had a moment to help out, Kevin stepped forward and quietly said he would sing.  Kevin!  He was wonderful.  The audience cried silent tears.

That’s what happens when children have the freedom to be, and the support to ‘just do it’.

Today Kevin is in a top college, a math and science guy.  He wears a big smile, and he has a knowing warmth about him, much like someone who has had a few life experiences under their belt.  He has, indeed.

Jennie

Posted in Early Education, Expressing words and feelings, Imagination, Inspiration, joy, Love, play performances, preschool, Teaching young children | Tagged , , , , , , , | 92 Comments

Quotations on Success

Wonderful quotations on success! Thank you, Charles French.

frenchc1955's avatarcharles french words reading and writing

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“Success is not final, failure is not fatal: it is the courage to continue that counts.”

                                                                     Winston Churchill

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“It is hard to fail, but it is worse never to have tried to succeed.”

                                                                     Theodore Roosevelt

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“Only those who dare to fail greatly can ever achieve greatly.”

                                                                     Robert F. Kennedy

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Ringing in the New Year with a Teacher- My Hero

Many years ago, when our children were little and things were tight, our washing machine broke. When it rains it pours. I spent weekends at the laundromat – a perfect place to read while waiting for the wash to be done. A new book had hit the market, Chicken Soup for the Soul, by Jack Canfield and Mark Victor Hansen. It was packed with short stories that were captivating; they made me feel good.

One story struck me like a thunderbolt. It is about a teacher. That story kept me going; and still does to this day. Every year as the New Year rings in, I read the story and I vow to be that teacher.  She is my hero.

I don’t think people know she’s my hero.  I doubt my own children even know; they would say my it’s my grandmother, Nan.  And, so would most people close to me.  Nan was the best grandmother, and what I learned from her shaped my character, taught me far more than even she ever realized about reading and art.  She was strong and kind, and she always inspired me.  She touched every part of my life.  Nan was a superhero.

There are heroes, and there are superheroes.  Just ask any 8-year-old.  A superhero makes a difference to everything in your life, like Nan.  A hero is someone who touches your life in a very specific way.

Heroes inspire me, because then I become a better teacher.  That one person is a teacher in Baltimore long ago.  Her teaching made me stop and realize what’s really important.  When I read her story, I felt like I was walking in her footsteps.  Well, I felt like those were the footsteps I had to walk in.  I wanted to be just like her.  I needed to be just like her.  My throat still closes and my heart pounds when I read her simple story.  It is in the original Chicken Soup for the Soul book, published in 1993:

Love: The One Creative Force

A college professor had his sociology class go into the Baltimore slums to get case histories of 200 young boys.  They were asked to write an evaluation of each boy’s future.  In every case the students wrote, “He hasn’t got a chance.”  Twenty-five years later another sociology professor came across the earlier study.  He had his students follow up on the project to see what had happened to these boys.  With the exception of 20 boys who had moved away or died, the students learned that 176 of the remaining 180 had achieved more than ordinary success as lawyers, doctors and businessmen.

The professor was astounded and decided to pursue the matter further.  Fortunately, all the men were in the area and he was able to ask each one, “How do you account for your success?”  In each case the reply came with feeling, “There was a teacher.”

The teacher was still alive, so he sought her out and asked the old but still alert lady what magic formula she used to pull these boys out of the slums into successful achievement.

The teacher’s eyes sparkled and her lips broke into a gentle smile.  “It’s really very simple”, she said.  “I loved those boys.”

My copy of the book is worn, and the pages open-up to this story, because I’ve read it too many times to count.  It changed how I looked upon teaching and children.  I often write about an emergent or child-centered curriculum, and how that has led to the best learning.  Well, now you know where it started.  And, now you know who my hero is.  If I can fill her shoes and give children the same love so they can succeed, that’s all I need.

Jennie

Posted in Book Review, books, Expressing words and feelings, Giving thanks, Inspiration, joy, Kindness, Love, reading, Teaching young children | Tagged , , , , , , | 92 Comments

Poetic Multiplication Table

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Holiday Delight – One Child

A holiday Open House tonight, hosted by my fellow teacher.

In walked one of my favorite students, along with her parents.

And the world stopped.

All the people seemed to disappear so we could play.

And we did.

Happy New Year!

Jennie

Posted in Early Education, Expressing words and feelings, Giving thanks, Inspiration, joy, Kindness, Love, preschool, young children | Tagged , , , , | 37 Comments

Hector Fox and the Giant Quest

Hector Fox and the Giant Quest

I have been teaching preschool for thirty-five years.  I’m the guru of picture books at school.  Frankly I’m picky, and I know a good book when I read one.  Hector Fox and the Giant Quest by Astrid Sheckels is outstanding, so good that I purchased it for myself in 2016.  Here is what sets this book above the rest:

Illustrations
The illustrations are simply stunning and rich in detail.  Every page draws the reader into the story.  Astrid’s rendition of each animal, the forest, and Hector’s house is remarkable.

Animals
The animals in the story are familiar and also unfamiliar, giving children the comfort of what they know, and curiosity to learn something new.  How many children know of a marten?  None in my classroom.  Instead of making the animals all one size, Astrid purposely gives them correct proportions – and it works!

Vocabulary
E.B. White said to never write down to children.  The book uses “big words”, such as quest, marsh, merry band, wary, hearty, and more.  When I begin to read the book, first reading the title, I talk about the word quest, and ask the children what it means.  Then we look at the cover and talk about a quest in the woods, and what that might be.  It takes me ten minutes, and the children are eager and curious before I have read the first page.

Storyline
The story flows.  It is exciting!  Children are drawn to adventure, and they always like animal stories.  Fairy tales have withstood the test of time for those exact reasons.  This book does the same thing and has all the makings of a fairy tale – I think not a coincidence that the book is centered on Hector’s book of fairy tales.  The elements of friendship, family, bravery, and working together are pieces that are important, and also what children want to hear.

Bottom line – Children love the book!  That’s the true test.

I for one am very eagerly looking forward to the next Hector Fox adventure.  I rarely purchase a book for myself, and I’ll purchase a new Hector Fox book in a heartbeat.  Really.

Jennie

Posted in Book Review, books, children's books, Early Education, Imagination, picture books, reading, young children | Tagged , , , | 45 Comments

Holiday wishes and inspiring teaching videos 2018 – Readilearn

Dear Teachers, As the joy of the holidays fade and winter begins, we are now plunging into the busy season of teaching children. This is the time we need to be at our very best. Children are depending on us. That can feel overwhelming. Here are 10 videos from Norah Colvin to inspire you. From reading aloud, to science, to making a connection with children…to Elton John as a little boy – these will fill you up. Laugh, cry, and be inspired to educate children. I certainly am. -Jennie-

Norah's avatarNorah Colvin

Holiday wishes

As the holiday season draws nigh, I wish you and your loved ones a very happy and safe holiday season. May you have time to relax, refresh, rejuvenate and, most of all, have fun.

Teaching inspiration

Holiday time can be perfect for catching up on things missed during the busyness of work. To both affirm and inspire you, I have curated a short list of some of my favourite videos. I hope you find time to enjoy them too.

Ten inspiring videos

Kate DiCamillo on the magic of reading aloud

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Blessings Tonight

Tonight

Christmas Eve in all its glory.

Right in my backyard.

I am blessed.

Jennie

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Today’s Quote

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Do You See What I See?

And what to my wondering eyes should appear,

Books, a tree with lights, a photo with grandchildren, a candle, and my favorite quote by Maya Angelou, my mantra, my rally:

“People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people,will never forget how you made them feel.”

Jennie

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