Now enrolling for ages 2-6!

Loomis Community Preschool Tot Class

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September was an exciting month for this group of 2 year olds. They needed very little introduction to how things work at LCP as 5 of the 10 children in the class are the 2nd or 3rd sibling to come to Loomis Community Preschool. Those that were new to Loomis Community Preschool quickly learned the ropes and soon felt right at home. The first week at school they all got to work making collages, painting pictures, playing with play dough, and navigating the play yard.

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Even though at 2 years old most children engage in parallel play (playing alongside one another) they no doubt enjoy the opportunity to be around each other. They begin to watch each other and copy one another.

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They find ways to interact with one another such as placing their snack in a friends “trunk” while they are taking a ride.

They even defy the odds of developmental norms and sit and listen to an entire story.

 

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Visiting an Apple Orchard

Loomis Community Preschool visited Machado’s Apple Orchard this week!

We started in the orchards, tasting peaches, apples, and pears.

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We made our way through the orchard to a picnic table where we…

…enjoyed apples with our friends

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…and drank apple juice.

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The day was so enjoyable it left us saying, “More please?”

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More to come this week with apple painting and apple taste-testing in the classroom.

If you bought some apples on the field trip, why not try making delicious apple chips with your kids?

 

 

4 Reasons Kids Are Amazing

1. They are unfazed by the salty feeling left on your hands after you dig your fingers into a pile of play dough.

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2. They think it is fun to trap one another and hide in small spaces.

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3. They don’t make assumptions.  Who says you have to paint with a paint brush?

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4. They have the ability to unknowingly mock the adults around them, by creating a picture of adulthood: “I am so consumed with my phone, I can’t even put it down to eat a meal with my friends.”

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We would all be a lot smarter if we paid more attention to the preschoolers in our lives.

 

Loomis Community Preschool Graduation

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It seems like preschool graduation was just yesterday. We enjoyed class promotion/graduation ceremonies along with entertainment by Music Matt. He gave the kids opportunities to sing in the microphone and play the drums. The potluck was plentiful and the company wonderful as always.

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We were so happy to have Teacher Robannie join us with her bundle of love to pass out certificates to her students.

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As we look back on our graduation from a few months ago, we wish all LCP students a wonderful start to a new school year, where ever you may be.

“It’s all magic!”

St. Patrick’s Day has become one of my favorite celebrations at preschool.  The idea of these little elvish creatures sneaking into our classroom, leaving trails of glitter and causing mischief, totally captivates children’s imaginations.  It takes but a moment to introduce this magical scenario, and the children just run with it!

With the help of their trusty leprechaun magnifying glasses, children found clues everywhere:  glitter trails and green footprints and golden treasure left in the sensory tub.   Once child exclaimed, “When you look at the glitter through the magnifying glasses it’s actually glowing!”

Further evidence that the leprechauns had come to visit:  they upended furniture in the block room and left a little note…

 

Leprechauns are small, so you have to look for them in every nook and cranny…

 

“We found more clues!  Footprints!”

 

It takes care and patience to sort out leprechaun treasure…

 

Once we knew that leprechauns were afoot, children made leprechaun traps…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

…and took a scavenger hunt to find the leprechaun’s hidden gold.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Within all this magic, there were still technical questions to consider.  And children had the explanations…

How do you catch a leprechaun?  The traps need to be green with something shiny inside.

How did the leprechauns mix up the numbers on our calendar board?  They stood on each other’s shoulders to reach the numbers, and the leprechaun on the top shouted directions to the one on the bottom.

How did they move our block room furniture around?  Lots of leprechauns had to gather around it and work together.

How did they escape?  Through a tiny hole in the wall!

Are you a leprechaun, Teacher?

“Well, look how tall I am.  I’m much too big to be a leprechaun.  And leprechauns have green hair!”

No, they decided leprechauns have brown hair, and therefore I was very likely a leprechaun:  “Leprechauns can change size, ya know!”

And here’s my favorite quote of the whole day.  As he was racing about the classroom, peering through his leprechaun magnifying glass and searching for clues, a little boy stopped in his tracks, looked up at me and declared,  “Santa’s magic!  Everything’s magic!!!”

Ah, if we all could spend our days with this feeling!  What a gift to spend time with young people, who help us reconnect with all the joy, enthusiasm, and creativity that a sense of magic infuses in our lives.

And for the record, while I did sprinkle trails of glitter, I did not make any little green footprints…so perhaps the leprechauns are real after all…

 

 

 

Inspiration

In a previous post, I was thinking about the importance of seeing the world in news ways, from new perspectives, for both children and adults.  As a teacher, I am always grateful for ideas and inspiration that will help make our classroom more dynamic and engaging.  Here are some of the most recent results of my search for new ideas…

Magnet Wall

Thanks to the fundraising efforts of our families, we recently purchased a magnet wall set from the company Kodo Kids (http://www.kodokids.com/).  They create an awesome array of high quality products that encourage open-ended, play-based exploration.   One of our parents generously built the actual magnet wall for us–a piece of sheet metal backed with playwood, spray painted black, with a wooden frame.  The magnet set we purchased includes ramps, rings (to hold funnels and cups), and small “walls” (that help control the path of materials as they move down the ramps).  With this magnet wall system, children have the opportunity to explore and manipulate materials on a large, vertical space.  So far, children have experimented with both balls and water (and then the two together)…

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The first few times we explored with the mag wall, I set up a few ramps systems to get children started.  But I love the fact that the children weren’t satisfied to stay with those set-ups for long, as they quickly discovered these moveable parts were meant to be manipulated again and again.  I am so excited to have this new activity as a permanent fixture on our playground!

Sensory Table

While researching new ideas for our sensory table, I came across the blog of an early childhood educator, Tom Bedard (http://tomsensori.blogspot.com/2012/12/horizontal-channels-version-50.html).  He has such creative ideas for augmenting the sensory table:  rather than just changing out the contents of the table, he uses cardboard, PVC, and other materials to manipulate the space and shape of the table itself.  Here was my first attempt to replicate his great ideas.  I used a large cardboard box that sat on top of the table, with cardboard walls taped inside to create channels, and another large box attached to create a ramp.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As the pictures show, the ramp was the most engaging aspect of this particular structure!  Thank you, patient parents, for endlessly sweeping up birdseed scattered across the floor!

Children were also fascinated by a watercolor mixing station in the sensory table, which included cups of liquid watercolors, eye droppers, plastic tubes, funnels and clear plastic egg cartons.  Just the simple change of adding two racks in the sensory tub, and a table next to the tub, invited children to explore the space in a new way.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Loose parts

Pintrest proved to be very helpful in my search, allowing me to see a wealth of ideas in one place.  (I am quite new to Pintrest, so these initial findings were very exciting and rewarding!)  Adding “loose parts” to the block room area was a popular concept; and, again, I am so impressed by all the creativity of early childhood teachers out there, not to mention grateful that they are sharing their ideas!  I tried out the addition of thin branches trimmed from a mulberry tree in my backyard, cut into about one foot in length, and cuttings from Teacher Sherry’s redwood tree.  We started with the sticks and branches in the block room, which inspired a camping theme.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Once the campfire was built, children suddenly wanted to sing together.  We’d read, sung and acted out  “The Farmer in the Dell” at circle time,  so the Block room parent opened the book back up and led the children in a singalong.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The camping theme morphed to include our plastic animal set and a fishing expedition.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This particular activity proved to be a wonderful interplay between the children’s creativity and the attentive support of the working parent who responded to and encouraged their ideas.  For the adults in a play-based classroom, it’s a delicate balance between giving children space to engage their own ideas, creativity, problem-solving, and intuition and stepping in to offer needed guidance and support.  While children should indeed take the lead, the thoughtful support of attentive adults can guide children’s play to new levels of interest and engagement.

Pulleys & Pendulums

A book called More Than Magnets, by Sally Moomaw and Brenda Hieronymus,  is to thank for a variety of activity ideas based on pulleys and pendulums.

Children first experimented with using the pulleys to transport cans full of small objects (small plastic bears, stones, cube blocks, etc).  I appreciated how using the pulleys required teamwork and communication; as children became more familiar with the action of the pulleys, they were able to teach classmates just joining the activity.  Children then started a game of collecting a piece of “treasure” every time they pulled the bucket back over to their side.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The next adventure with pulleys added the exciting and messy element of paint.  I cut a plastic water bottle in half and filled a small squeeze bottle with watered down paint.  The top of the squeeze bottle (mostly) stayed  nestled in the narrow opening of the water bottle.  I punched holes in the cut side of the water bottle and tied it to the pulley rope.  As the children pulled the rope back and forth, it provided sufficient action to “shake” the paint from the squeeze bottles.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Children’s engagement with this activity included both quiet concentration on the action of the pulleys and giddy laughter at the satisfying splatter of paint!

As for the pendulum activity, we tried two variations with paint.  Both variations utilized long PVC pipes mounted in concrete, with a rope strung between them, as the frame.  In the first, paintbrushes were attached to string and hung from the rope; children could dip their brushes in paint and then swing the brushes back and forth.  In the second (and much messier!) variation, I again used a water bottle cut in half; but instead of a squeeze bottle, I nestled a small funnel in the spout of the water bottle, and children could scoop slightly watered-down paint into the funnel before sending the pendulum for a ride.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Needless to say, we needed a paper three times this size to contain the drips of paint!!

So that’s a little sampling of some of the new activities we tested out over the past few days and weeks.  I am so grateful for the creative ideas educators are sharing in books and blogs.  But most of all, I am so grateful to the parents of our school who support Teacher Sherry and me as we introduce these new, often messy, activities and implement them with energy, flexibility, and a great sense of humor.  None of this fun would be possible without all of you!  Thank you!!

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Piles of red and pink paper scraps and a layer of glitter over the entire classroom…must be Valentine’s Day!  Children were busy with a variety of Valentine-themed activities.

They practiced fine motor skills as they cut out paper hearts for a heart garland, which we hung up for decoration.

 

 

Conversation hearts offered the opportunity to practice math skills such as sorting, counting, and graphing.

 

We not only had a Valentine exchange within our class, allowing each child to make a homemade card for a secret Valentine, but children also put great care into creating dozens of Valentines for our friends at the Senior L.I.F.E. Center.

 

And of course, we had to get messy!

 

Happy Valentine’s Day!  Here’s to putting our hearts into joyful play!