Thursday, December 22, 2022

Preschool Room Reflections 2023

 Room Reflections January 2023

21st December 2022

So I'm writing these reflections before I even start teaching. This way you can see my to-do list and my ideas for the classroom. When I'm able to fine tune the floor plan and the shelving and resourcing, I'll add in photos. I am so freaking excited about this up and coming year I can't even. 

To Do List:

  • Set up Planning Diary 2023 + Bound
  • Set up Planning Calendar 2023 + Bound 
  • Created Preschool Plan Template in StoryPark for 2023 
  • Completed Room Set Up Reflections Book for 2023

Room Arrangement:

Assistant and I worked to create our initial room space. I’d already identified that it made sense to keep the painting next to the bathroom door so we don’t have paint covered children walking through the room to wash their hands. 

I’d also like to have sensory play as part of the classroom and that could be at the playdough table or possibly the jellybean table. There are opportunities across the space. 

I am also considering putting my nature and science table and discoveries where two shelves meet and can create a nice wide surface. Or it could also be a small world play space. 

We have pot plants, and we will continue to have them moving forwards. We are planning on adding more to the classroom. 

Our Indoor Preschool Play Spaces:

We’ve created our learning spaces using the resourcing and shelving, tables and chairs we have. We’ve also considered pathways and traffic flow across the room. 

We have things in the way that I would very much like to move out of the way such as a large 2nd hand photocopier (that is being retired at some point) and the fridges. If we move the fridge down a little we can back to back them and gain back some wall space once the photocopier is gone We can then use the sides of the fridges as notice boards or information boards AND place a shelf in the middle and use that for displays or for books or compliance folders. 

Our Preschool Indoor Play Spaces for January/February:

  • Painting with mini easels (2) 

    • Water colour trays 
    • Acrylic paints in small pots that can mixed to create new colours 

  • Playdough table with collage trolley in the middle for dough tools (4) 

    • Rollers, cutters, small containers and cups 
    • Wooden stampers, clay hammers, dough tools
    • Thick sticks, twigs, pebbles, river stones. 
    • Playdough in muted tones. 
    • Playdough in two colours for children to mix 
    • Playdough inspo pictures/Playdough mats?

  • Drawing table at door with turn table in middle (4) 

    • Paper in various sizes - A4, A5 and A6. 
    • Frames of patterns 
    • Frames with Aboriginal patterns/language 

  • Writing Table against wall near painting table (2) 

    • A5 size paper with mini clip boards
    • Tin with pencils in graphite
    • Tin with coloured pencils 
    • Alphabets in frames
    • Word/Vocab cards on rings 

  • Small world play table (2)

    • Dinosaur small world play set: mini felt volcano, volcanic stones, river stones, pebbles, vinyl river and pond,  Wooden and felt trees + cardboard tube and paper tree tops 

  • Puzzles + small manipulatives (4) 

    • Magnetic blocks (small set)
    • Wooden geometric blocks 
    • Peg puzzles 
    • Life cycle puzzles 
    • ABC + 123 + shape puzzles
    • Magnetic tiles (large set)

  • Block area in the group area next to computer (4) 

    • Wooden unit blocks 
    • Baskets of people figurines, large animals, loose parts, small wooden blocks, natural blocks, branches, sticks, planks etc.
    • Recycled boxes turned inside out with buildings drawn on them. 
    • Wooden and felt trees + Homemade trees
    • Tree stumps with planks?
    • Low bench/shelf with baskets of loose parts

  • Home corner with lounge at middle of room (4) 

    • Recycled and repurposed boxes and containers stuffed with shredded paper. 
    • Jars with lids for dried goods: lentils, beans, chickpeas, pastas, rice etc. with words written on jars. 

  • Book area TBD (2) interim next to lounge 

    • Books in baskets, books on shelf

  • Science + Discovery Shelf/Display/Table

    • Cycline bottle 
    • Discovery bottles - make with the children so they feel ownership and connection 
    • Magnets 
    • Eye -spy bottles with small mini things in rice 
    • Life cycle sets 
    • Scientific posters, displays of life cycles, dissections of plants, cross sections of insects, aquarium with water plants and water snails or a fish?

We have a total of 28 positions in the classroom for a class of 20 children. This gives children plenty of play spaces and opportunity to play and learn in smaller groups or a larger group. 

Preschool Curriculum Plan 2023:

Once our rooms are organized we will sit down on our first joint planning session and tackle the plan for 2023. We have our initial plan from 2021 that I helped create way back when. 

Our previous plan is our starting point and we can then add in any new additions to our spaces such as the new climbing equipment.  We can then also share this with our extended team. Everyone needs to know 

We will source an A3 sized display folder so we can place the plans in there and also include some printed images of our vision board for 2023. 

Goals for Term 1 2023

I chatted with my co-teacher about next year’s goals for the children and we thought that it would be best to make our first term all about belonging and forming relationships with educators and peers. We will write these starting in 2023 and then have them set up online for the families and other educators. 

We will update our preschool goals for our classes next year and feed that information into Storypark so it is easier to tag them on the children’s observations. We will also create our own written versions of the learning outcomes so that we don’t have to spend time matching the learning outcomes. Streamlining! 

Preschool Veranda Play Space:

  • Table 1: Drawing table - paper on clip boards plus pencils in tins in basket. 
  • Space 2: Duplo on mat or low table (wooden coffee tables via op-shop or marketplace). 
  • Space 3: Small world play set up on low table 
  • Space 4: Lounge chairs with baskets of books
  • Easel with acrylic paints + drying string (also possibly placed in garden?

Preschool Outdoor Play Space

  • Climbing equipment 1 
  • Climbing equipment 2 
  • Hoops + Balls 
  • Bikes with bike path + chairs for queuing children
  • Mud Kitchen (move to sandpit) 
  • Sandpit with recycled containers and kitchen items
  • Construction zone play + natural elements, dirt, stones, concrete clumps?, 

Gardening with Preschoolers

  • Set up potting station to use with children for setting up growing station 
  • Plank of wood + crates for growing tables for seeds to germinate 
  • 2 vegetable beds 
  • Grow vines + low vegetables along fence line. Grow the 3 Sisters along the fence line?: Corn/Squash/Beans? 
  • Grow nasturniums 
  • Add more grasses to the sensory garden.
  • Replant plants that are too high + add mulch 
  • Reposition stepping stones 
  • Create flower patch along pathway at entrance to preschool next to grevillea. Plant more grevilleas + add in flowering for bees and butterflies 
  • Add in small trays of water for insects and lizards with stones + sticks.

Preschool Routines 

  • Start summer routine and include an indoor outdoor program to assist children in settling into the classroom 
  • Crunch and sip at 10am
  • Meals at tables in small groups 
  • Including elements of belonging + name recognition in routines.
  • Move hats outside for easy access. 
  • Create circles of childrens names + photo to place above their number hook for bags. 
  • Arrive at service, greetings, parent sign in, child to hang bag, place name card on hook, fruit and water bottle on trolley, lunch into tubs, confirm/apply sunscreen, wash hands, play
  • More later … 


Sunday, December 4, 2022

Science Centres + Nature Tables for Preschool

The Value of a Science Centre for Preschool 

This Blog is a Work in Progress! But I'm so excited I've just had to publish it now as it is ... There will be images and inspo and ideas and links to resources coming soon! 


Children are natural scientists, and they are keen to explore the world around them. 

The humble science center in an early childhood service is so much more than just a spot you plonk some science stuff.  A true science center will intrigue and inspire children's curiosity and learning. It's a space that will be inherently interesting and be an invitation to learn offering children many opportunities to investigate, explore, discover, and use all of their senses to learn about the world around them. 

" Curriculum should include activities that encourage children to use their five senses to observe, explore, and experiment with scientific phenomena. Include simple tools in your science learning center so that preschoolers and kindergartners can observe objects and scientific phenomena. Provide experiences and materials that allow children to collect data and to represent and document their findings (e.g., through drawing or graphing). Teachers should plan activities and provide experiences that encourage children to think, question, and reason about observed and inferred phenomena. (2018, p. 27)"
National Association for the Education of Young Children. (2018). NAEYC early learning program accreditation standards and assessment items.

Links to the Early Years Learning Framework (EYLF)

Early Years Learning Framework - Learning Outcome 4: Children Are Confident and Involved Learners: 4.1 Children develop dispositions for learning such as curiosity, cooperation, confidence, creativity, commitment, enthusiasm, persistence, imagination and reflexivity.

The Vision of a Preschool Science Centre + Nature Table for my Classroom

I have always incorporated nature and nature exploration as part of my curriculum in early childhood settings, however in 2015 I started setting up designated tables and spaces in my classrooms. This aligns with both the philosophies of Waldorf-inspired approach and the Montessori-inspired approach. 

Setting the Scene of our Science Centre

If you lack the space for a designated learning corner or table you can have collections of gathered seasonal treasures in a box or basket or even a tray. I had one student many moons ago who loved collecting rocks and "coconuts". The "coconuts" were seed pods and he'd carry them home at the end of each day with dedication. His family popped his treasures into a box which would have its contents siphoned43 off from time to time - the never-ending collection! 

As I prepare myself for a year in preschool, I am thinking about my science centre and nature table that I cannot wait to create for and with the students! As I sit here and visualise I'm seeing some sweet retro shelves that I've salvaged from the side of the road or from op-shops. I can't wait to have an excuse to hit the opshops. 

So anyway, back to the wooden shelves ... I'll have tubs or baskets with discovery bottles, magnifying glasses, natural treasures and loose parts. I can bring in a few of my own baskets and my collection of science and information books. I can't decide if I'll have a big noticeboard with the table, or if I'll have it looking out a window. The bonus to using the notice board, is we can add diagrams and images and explore documentation 

When I started wriging this blog, I was brushing my tangled way-too-long hair and researching. I found some fabulous blogs and pages and I thought they're too good not to share! So rather than just bookmark them or jot down some ideas for my own space, I thought why not add them to this article in a "further reading" section! So I hope you enjoy! 

Resourcing the Space 

  • Discovery bottles 
  • magnifying glasses 
  • natural and botanical loose parts 
  • terrariums 
  • photo cards 
  • crystals, rocks, gems 
  • growing plants in water such as spider plant, onions, Swedish ivy 
  • life cycle figurines 
  • life cycle posters and signs 
  • vocabulary cards 
  • science and reference books  
  • colour lenses 
  • metal and magnets
  • sensory materials ot touch + smell 
  • tweezers, sorting trays, tongs 
  • scales, rules, measuring tapes
  • bug catchers, aquariums

- GiGi 

References + Further Reading 

Nature Table Printables & Set Up - East TN Family Fun 

Nature Exploration Table - The Imagination Tree 

Nature Trays and Nature Tables (livingmontessorinow.com) 

Nature table in Montessori classes — The Wonderful World of Montessori (wonderfulmontessori.com) 

Science at the center: Meaningful science learning in a preschool classroom - Raven - Journal of Research in Science Teaching - Wiley Online Library 

How to set up the Science Center in your Early Childhood Classroom - Pocket of Preschool 


Seasonal Nature Tables

Nature Table: The Seasonal Table (thehomeschoolmom.com)

How to make a spring nature table - NurtureStore 

How to make an autumn nature table with free printables - NurtureStore 

Fall Nature Table for Preschoolers » Share & Remember | Celebrating Child & Home (thingstoshareandremember.com) 

Nature Table Printables & Set Up - East TN Family Fun


Australian Sources 

How to Create a Seasonal Nature Table Yarra Ranges Council 

Australian Nature Table (aunaturetable.blogspot.com) 


Science Centre

Science Center Set Up and Ideas for Preschool (pre-kpages.com)

Preschool Science Center Ideas - Little Bins for Little Hands 

Saturday, November 26, 2022

My Dream Preschool Outdoor Play Space

I'm Back! I know I know ... I've done this before. I really should upload my teaching reflections from 2021 because I started out strong, but then a 15 week lock down happened and I was 'teaching' preschool from home! Longest. Term. Of. My. Teaching. Career! Not to mention the toll it took on my personal sanity. But that's not why I'm back. I'm back because I have a new job in 2023! I am so exicted to be a preschool teacher full time. 

Yo. New job. Familiar team. And an outdoor space with tons of potential. I have finally landed my dream job. It only took me 4 years. And slowly the excitement is building. I am still pinching myself and worrying that it might disappear. 

So since I have a couple of months to dream and fantasize, I thought I might use this space to do that! I have already created some Pinterest boards, some ideas webbing and interviewing the current preschool class. I am so lucky I have the luxury to ask the current students what they like, either in words or through observation. Play is of course one of the hundred languages of children. 

I was having a lovely time on Friday when I was backfilling the current preschool teacher. I was watching my students engage in the entire outdoor area and I was pondering what next years students might like. There are of course the common interests of children that we can leverage to help children settle and develop their sense of belonging to a new community and space. 

Construction items had been put in the sandpit and they children were so amazingly engaged. Dolls indoors have been crazy loved as well, so of course we'll need to bring those outside. I'll bring my home made dolls, and I'll make a few more. Those can live inside my new classroom. And the existing dolls collection can move outside to the veranda and the other spaces. 

Small World Play in an Outdoor Play Space

Urban Road Small World Inspo 

This idea came from DigsDigs

It features a small urban setting with pebbles, rectangular and square pavers in a dark gray, lava rocks, bark and leaf mulch, a strategic small shrub, toy cars and vehicles intimate nook to engage in some pretend play.

I have been wanting to make a space like this for years. And when I say years, I mean years. I had plans to do this in the last centre I was manager, but the staff were so apathetic and it wore off on me in the end. After 4 years I had the early childhood life sucked out of me. So it has taken years to recover from this burnout and I am now in a position with a supportive team, in a healthy work environment, AND I don't have to hold back as I'm not waiting for the permanent teacher to return, because I know she won't be. So I can let my imagination run wild! 

Image from The Keeper of Cheerios

I really love the above idea using a magazine rack for the wooden roads. I really love these so much! I can't tell you! And I love that they are made portable. So I will DEFINITELY be making these, and I cannot wait to put them into action. 

Construction Zone Small World Inspo 

This idea came from DigsDigs

They have some awesome ideas! This deceptively simple outdoor small world play space features pebbles, mulch, sand and has section dividers using pavers. There are also pipes, rocks, tree trunks or thick branches and soil. It really is a sensory wonderland.  This space could be built using repurposed materials that you may have laying around or would be easily purchased from a large hardware chain that rhymes with Runnings *nudge-nudge-wink-wink*




Photo from Kinzie + Riehm via Pinterest

 

Dinosaur Small World Inspo


I of course MUST include a dinosaur small world. 

Found on Pinterest. @playful_porter

Magical Nooks and Sacred Spaces


This idea came from DigsDigs
 

This is a colorful teepee covered with yarn, pompoms, buntings, flags and other bright embellishments plus potted greenery.

We actually already have an existing wooden teepee structure. While I would love to create a new one using branches, it would be a silly double up. BUT while looking at this image I was inspired to embellish the teepee we already have. And I'll have to take some before and afters of course and then share them here. 

I can use the existing structure and then weave in some branches and create more of an organic frame. We can then add in some bling and make it gorgeous. I'm doing it. I can see it in my mind. I can't wait to start. I will have to wait since I'm not in the space yet. But making my vision board is totally how I get there. 

So now I can add in a wish list. I can make bunting myself, create some pompoms and add in some strips of fabric scraps since I have some rainbow fabric I found the other day! I've been carrying this fabric around since a job in 2009. Time to use it elsewhere and turn it into something else: bunting.

The teepee we have is already part of our sensory garden that I am working on establishing further, so adding in some potted plants would be a fabulous addition! 

Insert New Space Idea Here 


THIS BLOG IS CURRENTLY UNDER CONSTRCTION ... I AM WORKING ON IT IN THE BACKGROUND OVER THE NEXT COUPLE OF MONTHS. SO STAY TUNED.