So I have been working pretty hard the last few weeks getting lesson plans and themes ready for summer, and extended that to preschool for the year. I feel pretty good about what I have gotten together. I believe in letting children learn first from play and as an adult, paying attention and talking to them about what they are doing and what they can learn at the PreK age. I do 30-40 minutes a day of "preschool". This spring I have had one PreK kiddo who loves "school" time so there have been days we have done a little more, but not a horrible amount I am also teaching this child to play, rather than sit on the floor and look at a toy. (I have pressed for an assessment but can't make them do it). So, I do believe in teaching, but not in the way parents think it needs to happen.
But it made me wonder, with the push for "preschool" how do we convince parents that much of what they think the kiddos need is not age appropriate? This is after talking to the mother of a newly 4 YO girl the other day who was beside herself because she couldn't get her child to do worksheets. It also reminded me of a 3YO I had part of the winter who was in our schools half day pre K. This child came home with "homework" daily. Always worksheets, or art that was beyond her. Around Christmas, she came home with a blank paper plate. She was to cut and glue it in a way it became an angel. There were instructions with pictures. The teachers sent that one home to be redone because the one in class didn't work well. I wonder why?:confused: They really expect a child who is 3 to cut a paper plate and turn it into an angel with no adult intervention?
So my question is with all the push for Pre K, how do we as providers get parents to understand (and believe) that things like pushing worksheets, and art a child can't possibly do is causing more harm than good? I want to use this information to draw parents to my program, in which we do what I believe is age appropriate Pre K. But I am not sure how to do it!
But it made me wonder, with the push for "preschool" how do we convince parents that much of what they think the kiddos need is not age appropriate? This is after talking to the mother of a newly 4 YO girl the other day who was beside herself because she couldn't get her child to do worksheets. It also reminded me of a 3YO I had part of the winter who was in our schools half day pre K. This child came home with "homework" daily. Always worksheets, or art that was beyond her. Around Christmas, she came home with a blank paper plate. She was to cut and glue it in a way it became an angel. There were instructions with pictures. The teachers sent that one home to be redone because the one in class didn't work well. I wonder why?:confused: They really expect a child who is 3 to cut a paper plate and turn it into an angel with no adult intervention?
So my question is with all the push for Pre K, how do we as providers get parents to understand (and believe) that things like pushing worksheets, and art a child can't possibly do is causing more harm than good? I want to use this information to draw parents to my program, in which we do what I believe is age appropriate Pre K. But I am not sure how to do it!
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