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Engaging Parents in Early Childhood Learning By: Mrs. Ka’la Morris Early Learning Mentor Coach Facilitated By: Head Start Staff.

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Presentation on theme: "Engaging Parents in Early Childhood Learning By: Mrs. Ka’la Morris Early Learning Mentor Coach Facilitated By: Head Start Staff."— Presentation transcript:

1 Engaging Parents in Early Childhood Learning By: Mrs. Ka’la Morris Early Learning Mentor Coach Facilitated By: Head Start Staff

2 Purpose To encourage our parents to actively support student learning by working with students at home to promote student development.

3 11 Focus Areas Physical Development & Health Social & Emotional Development Approach to Learning Language Development Literacy Knowledge & Skills Mathematics Knowledge & Skills Science Knowledge & Skills Creative Arts Expression Logic & Reasoning Social Studies Knowledge &Skills English Language Development

4 Head Start Child Development and Early Learning Framework Wheel

5 Physical Health & Development  Demonstrates traveling skills- Use movement to enhance stories, runs, avoids obstacles and people while moving, rides tricycle using petals, and walks up and down stairs using alternating feet  Demonstrates balancing skills Hopping on one foot, walking on a low balance beam, and jumps over small objects  Demonstrates gross-motor manipulative skills- Support activities that encourage throwing and catching skills, increase difficulty by having child to sit down, stand up, or while walking.  Demonstrates fine-motor strength and coordination- Stringing large beads, pouring water into container, and turns knobs and open doors Holding drawing or writing tool with three point finger grip

6 Fine Motor Activity

7 Demonstration of balancing skills

8 Social &Emotional Development  Regulates own emotions and behaviors Manages feelings Follows limits and expectations Takes care of own needs appropriately  Establishes and sustains positive relationships Forms relationships with adults Responds to emotional cues Interacts with peers Makes friends  Participates cooperatively and constructively in group situations Balances needs and rights of self and others Solves social problems

9 Making friends

10 Forming relationships with adults

11 Approaches to Learning (Cognitive Development)  Initiative and Curiosity Encourage the use of imagination, flexibility, and inventiveness Support eagerness to learning Encourage questions  Persistence and Attentiveness Support and encourage child’s ability to begin and finish activities.  Cooperation Encourage cooperative play and modeling or teaching of peers.

12 Support curiosity in children

13 Language Development  Listens to and understands increasingly complex language Use language that is easy for the child to understand, explaining new vocabulary Talk to the child face-to-face instead of speaking from across the room  Uses language to express thoughts and needs Speak slowly and model correct grammar  Uses appropriate conversational and other communication skills Build on the child’s language Model conversational skills: taking turns, eye contact, speech volume, using polite words

14 Reading to encourage language development

15 Students taking turns saying the days of the week

16 Literacy Knowledge & Skill  Demonstrates phonological awareness Play verbal rhyming games Encourage children to listen to the sounds in their environment  Demonstrates knowledge of alphabet Singing the alphabet song, slowly (L,M,N,O,P) Teach child the letters in first name  Demonstrates knowledge of print and its uses Point to signs(STOP) or M in McDonalds  Comprehends and responds to books and other texts Read child's favorite book and retell story with the child’s assistance  Demonstrates emergent writing skills Provide child with numerous writing materials Support name writing

17 Students looking through books at local library

18 Student constructing first name puzzle

19 Math Knowledge & Skill  Uses number concepts and operations Count objects or fingers with your child Recite rhymes and songs about numbers  Explores and describes spatial relationships and shapes Review shapes with child Find shapes in child’s environment  Compares and measures Compare sizes and shapes with child  Demonstrates knowledge of patterns Display patterns and provide materials that allow child to expand the pattern

20 Teaching Assistant facilitating small group math activity

21 Students comparing size of towers of blocks

22 Science Knowledge & Skills Model observation by showing curiosity of the things in the environment ( leaves changing with the seasons, weather change) Connect new information with child’s prior knowledge Provide opportunities for children to care for or observe living things and their life cycles Use descriptive vocabulary such as: sink, float, melt, frozen. Mix different materials in water to observe the outcome (TANG, koolaid, tea, hot cocoa, etc.)

23 Teacher giving students the opportunity to observe the inside of a pumpkin

24 Weekly Reader

25 Creative Arts Expression  Explore visual arts Provide child with various materials to draw Allow child to view different artistic media, pictures, paintings, and murals (Children’s Art Museum, Downtown Dothan)  Explore musical concepts and expression Sing or listen to songs from many cultures Play a variety of music(jazz, R&B, gospel, country, rock and roll)  Explores dance and movement concepts (IMIL) Use vocabulary to express body movement (fast, slow, backwards, forwards, etc)  Explore drama through action and language Allow child space and opportunity to act out stories

26 Visual Art Students making snowflakes

27 Student playing music instrument

28 Logic & Reasoning The ability to think through problems and apply strategies for solving them.  Reasoning & Problem Solving Help child to recognize cause and effect relationships. Example: “ The water turned to ice because we placed it in the freezer.” Seek multiple solutions to a question, task, or problem  Symbolic Representation Engages in pretend play and acts out roles Explain the difference between fantasy situations and reality.

29 Student dividing candy by color

30 Students in Dramatic Play Center

31 English Language Development  Receptive English Language Skills Participates with movements and gestures while other teachers dance and sing in English Responds or acknowledges nonverbally to common words or phrases, such as “hello” and “bathroom”  Expressive English Language Skills Repeats words or phrases to self, such as “bus” while singing the “Wheels on the Bus” or “brush teeth” after lunch. Request items in English, such as “car”, “book”, or “ball”  Engage in English Literacy Activities Demonstrates eagerness to participate in songs, and rhymes and stories in English Points to pictures and says word in English, such as “book”

32 Father participating in child’s classroom

33 Student at Play Student Counting Student in Dramatic Play Center

34 Social Studies Knowledge & Skills Understanding people and how they relate to others and the world around them.  Self, Family, and Community Understands personal and family structure Understands the reasons for rules at home, classroom, and for laws in the community  People and the Environment Recognizes aspects of the environment, such as roads, buildings, trees, gardens, land formations, and bodies of water. Recognizes that we share the environment  History and Events Differentiates between past, present, and future Recognizes events that happened in the past, such as family or personal history Understands how people live and how they change over time

35 Father and daughter reading together

36 Understanding living environments

37 Conclusion & Questions

38 Resources o The Creative Curriculum for Preschool Volumes 1 - 5 o The Head Start Child Development and Early Learning Framework o The Head Start Preschool Curriculum Objectives o Pictures provided by Head Start Preschool Faculty and Staff


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