If you ever wondered about some of the terms your preschool teacher uses here is a great explanation from an article in Young Child...
Developmentally
appropriate? Scaffolding? Your child’s teacher might use language other
educators understand but may be new to you. This list of commonly used early
childhood terms can help you understand what the teacher means when she talks
about what and how your child is learning.
Approaches
to learning: How children become
curious about learning new things. It is also how children respond to learning
situations. Curiosity about the world, initiative and problem solving, and
focused attention and persistence are just a few approaches to learning
teachers and families hope to foster.
A teacher might say:
“Your child has some wonderful approaches to learning. She’s very persistent
when working on puzzles.”
Cognitive
development: How children learn to
think, make decisions, and solve problems.
A teacher might say: “We
want to build the children’s cognitive development, so today we conducted a
science experiment, and the children tried to predict the result.”
Constructive
play: When children use
blocks, LEGOs, or other materials to make buildings or towers.
A teacher might say:
“Rebekah made a pretty complicated castle during her constructive play today!”
Developmentally
appropriate practice (DAP): Teaching strategies that are based on knowledge of how young children
develop and learn, what makes each child unique, and the child’s community and
family culture and home language. DAP activities are neither too difficult or
too easy, but just right. For example, in most cases it is developmentally
appropriate to introduce a 4-year-old to the letters in his name, with the
expectation that over time he will learn to write his name on his own. On the
other hand, it is not developmentally appropriate to ask 4-year-olds to write
letters over and over again on worksheets.
A teacher might say: “In
this classroom, we don’t believe that worksheets are developmentally
appropriate.”
Dramatic
play: When children pretend to
be someone else, such as a firefighter or doctor, and they make up scenes and
dialogue.
A teacher might say:
“We’d love to have you bring a few items related to going to work for the
children to use in their dramatic play.”
Exploratory
play: When children discover
how materials work. For example, when playing with water or sand, children
explore how to fill and empty buckets.
A teacher might say:
“Today Andre discovered how to use a bucket to build a sand castle during his
exploratory play!”
Environmental
print: The words that are
all around us, such as store signs, a menu board, or a poster with the daily
schedule.
A teacher might say:
“Your child can learn a lot about reading and writing just by seeing
environmental print.”
Physical
and motor development: How
children use their bodies to make large movements with their legs and arms
(gross motor) and small movements with their fingers and hands (fine motor).
Children learn with their legs and arms when they run, climb, or ride a
tricycle. They learn with their fingers and hands when they cut with scissors,
use a pencil, or construct a puzzle.
A teacher might say: “We
need to support children's fine motor development so we are using playdough to
strengthen fingers.”
Print
awareness: When children understand
how print works. For example, after listening to lots of stories, children
notice that letters make words, words make a story, and reading goes from left
to right in English.
A teacher might say:
“Maritza’s print awareness is developing. She’s picking up books right-side up
and is starting to turn the pages of the book herself.”
Self-regulation: How children learn to control their feelings and
their bodies. For example, if a child wants to play with a toy her friend is
using, she asks for a turn rather than grabbing it.
A teacher might say:
“I've seen so much grown in children's self-regulation. At the beginning of the
year children sometimes just take a toy they want even if another child is
using it. Now I hear them ask if they can use it..”
Social
and emotional development: How
children learn about feelings. It helps them feel good about themselves and
helps them understand the feelings of other people.
A teacher might say: “We
are supporting children's social and emotional development by reading books
about friendship.”
Scaffolding: When an adult helps children learn at a
faster rate and more than they would on their own. For example, when an adult
holds a child’s hand as he goes up the slide ladder, the adult is scaffolding
his learning to climb.
A teacher might say:
“Robert is almost ready to climb up the slide ladder on his own, but not quite.
I’ve been helping him by holding his hand and scaffolding his climbing skills
until he’s able to do it without my help.”
- See more at: http://families.naeyc.org/learning-and-development/music-math-more/12-teacher-terms-demystified#sthash.jpQ7aOH9.dpuf
Source: Adapted from
“Talking About Education With Families” by Angel Sancho Passe, Teaching Young
Children 6 (4): 6-7 - See more at:
http://families.naeyc.org/learning-and-development/music-math-more/12-teacher-terms-demystified#sthash.jpQ7aOH9.dpuf
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