Friday, December 26, 2008
Welcoming New Students, Field Trip
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
December Newsletter
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Mittens update, conference letter, article
We have been using blue stretch mittens for all the children at outside time. Children put on a pair after they have first put on their outside clothes. They may take them off for picking berries. Now that they have used them for a few days, I observe that most children seem content with the mittens; they are light enough that they allow the children to feel their hands enough to, say, use a shovel in the sandbox. When we gather at the ropes course shelter for our snack, children take off their mittens. Kim and I give new pairs of mittens after snack to replace wet mittens. I collect the mittens again right before we gather for the closing circle.
Since the blue mittens seem to work for all the children in the class, I recommend taking other mittens and gloves home, or to have some ready in your car. One of my goals is to avoid having your mittens get lost at school.
Even though I purchased a lot of mittens, it will be important to keep track of them (another way to say this is because I purchased a lot of mittens I have to be extra vigilant or else I may lose them all). Their effectiveness is that they are easy to put on, allow children to retain a sense of touch and dexterity, AND can be replaced when they become wet and hands become cold. If blue mittens come home with your child, please return them. Kim washed particularly sandy mittens with children in the classroom today. It was a harmonious and healthy activity that delighted many children. Because there will sometimes be a wet set of mittens drying on the rack, we need multiple changes for the children, and I expect and hope our class to grow in size to twelve or close to twelve as we proceed in the year. Thank you for your help in keeping track of the mittens.
Children thrive when given the opportunity to participate in meaningful, tangible work--or to play in the presence of such work. Kim and I have been getting the children outside particularly early so that we can move sand from the big pile to the oven shelter for 45 minutes to an hour before taking our walk to our various places in the woods. Today I gave a number of children "sand" rides in the wheelbarrow.
I have filed printed copies and sent electronic copies of a conference preparation letter to families who have signed up by Tuesday. Here is a copy of the letter even if you choose to wait until spring or another time for a conference. Whenever you do come for a conference, it is most helpful if you provide me answers to the question in advance.
Whether you come to a conference next week or not, I encourage you to read this "Open Letter to a Mother of a 'Stuttering' Child." This is an old article. It may not even reflect current research by speech experts. It was given to me by a professor at the University of Maryland when I was training to become a public school nursery or kindergarten teacher; she found it to be one of the most helpful articles she had ever read about the importance of allowing children time to develop before fixing them with a label. As you will read in the article, the author and other researchers found that the most potent cause of stuttering was the diagnosis of stuttering. All children stumble over words and repeat from time to time; it was only once a parent or teacher regarded this normal disfluency as a problem that speech became more difficult.
I find many analogies with my work with children birth to 5. Children do not begin as miniature models of perfect adults (if there were such a thing) but develop in their own way and in their own pace. Some children may learn to ride a bike at 3, others much later. Some will be ready to solve conflicts with the words of Nelson Mandela or Gandhi from toddlerhood; most will use less beautiful forms of physical or verbal force as they learn how to be an individual in a group. Some children will pronounce all consonants at an early age. For some children, it is still normal for some consonants, especially blends, to wait until age 6 or beyond.
I am not advocating we ignore all medical professionals or other experts. There will be children for whom an early intervention provides tremendous benefits. For most children, even children with profound special needs, what we offer in Waldorf early childhood education and home life--real, meaningful work done artistically by a present adult in a nourishing enviroment that invites imitation and free movement and inspires the imagination, all within a strong rhythm that provides structure and predictabilty, while providing a life free from the over/understimulation of media, overscheduling, judgment, and rushing--already provides developmental help for all children.
Over the years, I find at conference times I spend less time comparing a child to the norms for an age and more time describing objectively what I see the child doing and hear the child saying. As I grow more experienced, I even wonder about my ability to report on a specific child's experience. As Susan Weber told me, we as teachers (and parents) have to be very careful about assuming we know how a child experience's things. A child might watch me move a pile of sand without ever coming to the pile. I might report to the parents about how the child watched intently and did not move. The child might report to the parents that she worked very hard and filled the wheelbarrow over and over and made many trips with the sand. Young children can live very much in a "we" consciousness. The child's report is more accurate than my observation; that was the experience for the child (and the reason why as teachers and parents we do children a great service when we bring intention and beauty to every physical act we do). In twenty years, parents and I might sit in silence at conference time, allowing the enormity of the miracle of child development and imitation to encompass us. In the mean time, I will do my best to keep communication open between home and school.
With warmth and light,
William Geoffrey Dolde
Monday, November 17, 2008
Conference Sign-up in lobby, Advent
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Butterfly Nursery and Children's Garden November newsletter
Sunday, October 19, 2008
Birthday Monday and Fire Fighter Boots
Monday, October 13, 2008
Visitors, cold, Pictures of play from the last week
Our nursery children continue to work together to create elaborate play scenarios. They tend to receive the Tuesday Eurythmy circle (there will be a parent meeting later this year about Eurythmy) with reverence. Children request dances and circle games from me on in the clearing near the ropes course. A number of children are recreating the puppet show I present. I spent Tuesday morning being driven around the classroom in a pretend bus, visiting various children at their play scenarios on farms, at beaches, in the mountains, at pretend kindergartens--all the while knitting woolen apples and pumpkins for the children to play with.
It became pretty apparent Wednesday that the weather has become much cooler. We will begin wearing mittens or gloves as a norm and take them off if the weather becomes milder (as it has this weekend). We will try to continue to have a snack outside during our walk; as it is colder, it will be best to bring vegetables, seeds. nuts, and the like. The juicy fruits of summer begin to feel pretty cold when we are snacking outside on a cool day. Kim also pointed out that fruits tend to get expensive on Whidbey Island in the winter while vegetables such as carrots and the like remain at a consistent price. While you should feel free to send a pear or apple if you still have a bumper crop at your house, plan on stopping fruit and sending vegetables with your child for these colder months--we always have room for them in the soup on Wednesday if we don't eat them all on our walk on Monday or Tuesday. We have a pretty good supply of pumpkin seeds and seasoned walnuts at school for our walks, and Kim and I will be making a little bit of extra bread to bring along on our walk on Tuesday and Wednesday.
Every child eats more than a little bit of rice and bread, and every child is at least eating some of the soup.Monday, October 6, 2008
September & October Newsletter
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Meeting Sunday, October 5
In continues to be a pleasure to witness your children play, work, imagine, cooperate, and find solutions and alternatives when cooperation is difficult. The Children's Garden newsletter comes out next week, and I want to save detailed descriptions of play scenarios inside and outside for that letter. Because grandparents and other relatives are reading of our children's experience from afar, I will also post my contribution to the newsletter to the blog once the hard copy of the newsletter comes out.
We have a parent meeting for the Butterfly nursery in our classroom this Sunday, October 5, from 3 to 4:30pm. Here is a proposed focus for the meeting. Please email me (wdolde@gmail.com) if you would like me to address other topics.
Arrival and a chance for parents to paint (Kim, the children, and I will transform these paintings into our lanterns for our lantern walk at the end of October).
A lecture/discussion on the way we can use the wisdom of Kim Payne and others in early childhood. While I observe that our nursery children show great capability in transforming conflict into chances for imagination and growth, I have also heard that there is general interest in the school and among early childhood families in particular in learning and working more with the work of Kim Payne. In my previous school, I took the three year training with Kim on his social inclusion work; I have attended a workshop with him at Sophia's Hearth; and I have spent a few years with colleagues translating his work for early childhood classrooms. As such, I think I am well suited to give a taste of this sort of work, and I can give examples of how our children are already showing prosocial and problem solving behaviors.
This lecture/discussion will have 5 general parts.
A. An brief introduction of some of the most important things I learn from Kim Payne. Another teacher or parent might take different points. Kim might make a different list himself.
1. Conflict is important for our development. It is our job as parents and teacher to help children when conflict gets stuck--while having trust that they also benefit from being involved in solving problems.
2. Restoration, making things right, doing things over is much more effective than punishment or apologies. This has nothing to do with being soft or wishy-washy. It has to do with being effective.
3. Help the children humanize one another.
4. Help children move from fixed positions to being able to express their needs and see how their needs can be a bit flexible and do not necessarily conflict the needs of others.
5. Notice what is working. When helping the most egregious situations, Kim and those who follow him are effective because they are able to show a, say, supposed bully that she does not always torment the supposed target. When a child realizes that she already is capable of performing a prosocial action (even if she normally chooses the more agressive one), she is much more likely to show the healthier, healing response.
B. A discussion of the selection "The Safety of Nonjudgment" from Your Child's Self-Esteem by Dorothy Corkille Briggs. This provides us a way as parents to support our children if they come home and say, "Jim is a bad boy. He took my toy." Briggs helps us move from judgmental and "you" statements to "I" statements. Although "I" statements have their place, beyond personal statements enhance our ability to guide our children in a truthful way (here is another link to that article from a previous blog). If you like the chapter from Briggs, copies of Your Child's Self-Esteem are coming to our school's library soon.
C. A discussion of an interview between a counselor and parents from Difficult Children - There is no Such Thing. In this conversation, the counselor demonstrates a remarkable ability to see beyond the ostensibly negative (and outright alarming) behavior of a young boy. It is amazing what we can do when we suspend judgment and look for the archetype of an ostensibly difficult child. I also want to place this selection here to help us think about possible "exceptions" to a child's version of a "no put-down diet" below. The counselor is able to help the parents see that insulting language from their son is not a direct attack at them but is instead an indication of pain or sensitivity. In a similar way with children, I will caution us from making our children apologize every time they say something like "You're the meanest child in this class" (which a child in Baltimore used to say, very nobly, when he saw one child treat an other child unfairly). We can model and offer an alternative, without judgment: "Yes, it is very upsetting to see that toy being taken away."
D. A reading of a version of Kim Payne's "no-put down diet" for adults and older children (he revises, so there may be more current models). Although the agreements work best for children in 5th grade and up and adults, the principle of noticing and trying to do things over (without asking questions or drowning young children with explanations) is very helpful with young children. I will provide hard copies of this selection at the meeting.
E. A discussion that as parents and teachers, we can't always do the best thing for every child in every situation. We do our best to keep our children safe and to support them as they transform conflict into conversation, but not every intervention is always going to seem best for every child--at least in the short term.
As a teacher learning and growing from year to year, I still sometimes wondered if I could have handled this or that situation differently or better. Master teacher Jack Petrash, from that other Washington's Waldorf School (outside of D.C.) helped me accept my imperfection in a brief passage from Waldorf Education -- Teaching from the Inside Out (available in our parent's library but checked out; this is a readable and eloquent introduction to Waldorf education):
Reflective teaching invariably leads to self-knowledge. Although this may sound daunting, there are simple ways to proceed. One understanding is that what makes a teacher good also has within it the possibility of making a teacher ineffective. For instance, classroom management is a skill many teachers need to develop. Getting large numbers of children focused and on task requires a variety of abilities. Teachers have to be clear about directions and expectations, and be both persuasive and compelling. To do this effectively teachers also have to develop a certain degree of insensitivity to individual needs and interests. In moving students from one undertaking to the next, it is often necessary to respond to questions with, "Not now. Please take your seat," or "Tell me about that in a couple of minutes, right now just get started," and of course, "No, you may not change your seat. You need to sit right there." The ability to move a group from one activity to the next requires that teachers ignore certain individual needs.
Some teachers do this so effectively that children simply comply and lessons go smoothly. However, if these teachers do not also cultivate a keen interest in the needs of individual children, their work will suffer. Teachers need simultaneously to have the ability to work with the whole group as well as the ability to focus on the individual. And this balance does not always come easily. Teachers generally start out with a natural inclination in one of these two areas and then realize that they need to work consciously to develop the other.
Again, I recommend Petrash's book(s). He has also published Covering Home (in our library) which gives lessons for parenting inspired by baseball and Parenting a Path through Childhood.
With warmth and light,
William Dolde