Friday, December 31, 2010
Week 13
Young Child
Sunday, December 12, 2010
Our Time: MILK & COOKIES
For the next few weeks, many of our classroom activities will offer the opportunity for your child to hear, create and experience loud sounds and quiet sounds. Games such as these help develop listening skills as well as allow the opportunity for your child to use his/her cognitive skills to explore and discover.
Activities which encourage the child to move or stop moving in response to a cue help the child develop inhibitory (internal) control. The ability to control body movement is an important step toward developing self-discipline.
Fine Motor Skills may be developed through games requiring focus on finger movements. These skills are essential in increasing the child’s ability to turn pages of a book, use a crayon, hold a toothbrush or use a spoon. Last 3 pics w/bells
Imagine That!: HELLO WEATHER, LET’S PLAY TOGETHER!
This week, we played a silly game reciting , such as “la,” “ba,” “boo,” and “ho,” while watching our mouths in the mirror. A phoneme is the smallest segment of speech. Developing phonemic awareness is critical in laying the groundwork for learning to read and write.
We also worked on our fine motor skills while singing Lirum, Larum and wiggling our fingers individually.
And of course, we had more fun with our “snowball” fights and “ice skating.”
Young Child 1
This is one of my favorite weeks in Young Child! We started learning about the staff!
Reading and writing in music is called music notation. This week the children learned about the note c on the music staff. Note c on space 3!
We also talked a little bit about our glockenspiels and played a few songs on them. They will go home next week!
Young Child 3
Because the brain’s memory system is connected to the emotional system, things that are learned in a joyful environment are more likely to be remembered than those that are experienced in a less stimulating one. I hope your child finds joy in participating in playing their own compositions,
“paddling” through the “water” with our whole notes as we sing “Canoe Song,”
and practicing our Native American hand movements with “Land of the Silver Birch.”
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Our Time: MILK & COOKIES
Studies suggest that “children who learn that they have the capacity and opportunity to exert control over their actions early in life may be more likely to learn to accept responsibility for their actions as they mature.” – Fostering Children’s Social Competence: The Teacher’s Role by Lilian G. Katz and Diane E. McClellan
Imagine That!: HELLO WEATHER, LET’S PLAY TOGETHER!
This week in class, we went “ice-skating.” This kind of pretend play allows children to practice separating objects from their real-life uses, developing abstract thinking. Abstract thinking is required in order to understand symbolic representation, the first steps of learning to read and write.
We also heard three versions of the familiar song Jingle Bells. First, we sang along to a traditional arrangement; then we danced to a “jazzy” version; and last, we rocked to a soothing piano rendition. Take a few moments to listen to these again at home and talk with your child about the differences. Guiding your child to listen intentionally will help his/her aural skills as well as develop his/her use of vocabulary.
Also, your child brought home today a brand new book, Hurry Home, Little Kittens. Enjoy reading this together, singing the refrain and making lots of wind, rain and storm sounds!Young Child 1
The study of music is unique and fulfilling. Music uses a complex and theoretical system for notation and the “reading” of music scores while the appreciation of music requires an individual and inner understanding of the aesthetic qualities of sound. The human brain is, amazingly, able to process all of this at one time given early exposure to quality music experiences.
The study of music calls on the use of both hemispheres of the brain simultaneously. The right hemisphere generally tunes into the melody, tonality, and overall appearance of the sound while the left hemisphere attends to the notation, rhythm, and lyrics. Thus, the study of music is ideal in building communication lines in the human brain.
Young Child 3
As we continue the study of Native American music, we are integrating the rhythmic concept of beat patterns. Drums and shakers, integral to Native American music, are ideal instruments for working with four-beat patterns. The children have now learned that four quarter notes equal four beats; two half notes equal four beats; one whole note equals four beats;
and that there are many other note combinations that equal four beats.