Best of Parenting 2023

Best of Parenting 2023

Jan 25, 2021

Pre-K Two and The Pea

Pre-K Two read and learned all about The Princess and The Pea.  Afterwards, they drew a pea, stacked their own mattresses and put a picture of themselves on top. 





Jan 13, 2021

Let's Exercise!

Exercise is important for all ages, but especially for our children. 

Building a strong foundation at a young age not only offers health benefits into old age, but immediate results as well. Active kids equal healthy adults. While there are a wide range of benefits when kids exercise, here are our top five.

1 - Fights Disease
Physical activity helps kids control weight, lower blood pressure, raise HDL ("good") cholesterol and reduce the risk of diabetes as well as some kinds of cancer. Spending time outside raises levels of Vitamin D and strengthens children’s bone mass.

2 - Improves Behavior
Strong evidence suggests that physical activity, outdoor play and time in nature improve behavior problems in kids of all ages. One of the reasons natural settings reduce ADHD symptoms is because children’s stress levels fall within minutes of seeing green spaces.

3 - Develops Healthy Habits
Kids who exercise regularly at an early age develop healthy habits into adulthood. Parents who are role models for active lifestyles provide children with opportunities for increased physical activity and the family makes healthy decisions together.

4 - All Kids Benefit
The percentage of obese kids and teens has more than doubled in the past 30 years. All children, even less-coordinated ones, need to be physically active. Activity is especially helpful for the physical and psychological wellbeing of children with weight problems.

5 - Better Sleep
Physically fit kids sleep better and handle physical and emotional challenges more effectively. Active kids enjoy improved psychological wellbeing, including self-confidence and higher self-esteem.

Check out our toddlers getting some exercise in this week!





 
 
 
 

Jan 6, 2021

Shapes are Everywhere

 In preschool, children can learn to identify and name circles, triangles, squares, rectangles, and ovals. By using materials such as posters, blocks, books, and games, teachers expose children to various shapes and help them analyze two- and three-dimensional shapes in various sizes and orientations.

The following strategies and activities can help preschoolers learn to recognize and compare shapes.

  • Identify shapes. Introduce children to different kinds of triangles, such as equilateral, isosceles, scalene, and right. After finding them in the classroom or outdoors, children can outline the triangles with colored tape. For example, they might make right triangles red and scalene triangles blue.
  •  Introduce math words. Create a math word wall or incorporate mathematical words into the existing word wall—color-code the math words to make it easier for children to notice them. Be sure to write math words in English and in children’s home languages. Teachers can use real objects, photos, and black line drawings to define the words.
  •  Compare shapes. Ask children to identify different sizes of the same shape. For example, in the classroom they could search for rectangles, such as windows, doors, books, shelves, cabinets, computer screens, tabletops, and cubbies. Next, help children think as they compare the sizes of rectangles. The door is bigger than the cubbies. The cubbies are bigger than the book, but they are all rectangles. Encourage children to do the same with triangles, circles, and other shapes.
  •  What’s the difference? Explain the differences between two-dimensional (flat) shapes and three-dimensional (solid) shapes. How are the book and piece of construction paper the same? How are they different?
  •  Create a shape-scape. Teachers and families can collect three-dimensional objects such as cans, cartons, boxes, and balls to create a shape-scape. Children can use cylinders (paper towel rolls) as tree trunks, spheres (balls) as treetops, and rectangles (cereal boxes) as buildings. Teachers and children can work together to label the shape-scape, count the number of shapes used, and plan additions to the structure.
  •  Go from 3-D to 2-D. Preschoolers can dip three-dimensional objects in paints and press them on paper to make prints. Cans, spools, candles, and drinking glasses work well. The children will see the flat shapes that make up the sides of the objects.
  •  Discover shapes outdoors. Look for manhole covers, flags, windows, signs, and other distinct shapes. Working together, children and teachers can take photos of the shapes, label them in the photos, and assemble the photos into a class book.
  •  Play a shape guessing game. Have preschoolers play in pairs. Explain that one child will hide the shape behind her back and the other will ask questions about the shape. Does the shape have three sides? Does the shape have four angles?
Check out how our Pre-K One students made shapes of their own. They learned what shape it was, how many sides it has, and also worked on colors along with the shapes.