Brown Week was our final official "Color Week" and
cafe was reflected daily at the Art
Table!
This week also brought a renewed focus on Fall Gifts from
the Earth as we added beans to our Science Table and "Indian Corn"
kernels to the Water Table. The photos
aptly illustrate the great interest and focus the children demonstrated as they
examined, studied and "played" with these items.
We began our unit of study on Native Americans; "people
who lived long ago before there were any stores, depended on "Gifts from
the Earth" for all of their needs, and in turn took very good care of the
Earth." We will continue this area
of focus over the next several weeks.
In a related vein, we
discussed sharing our gifts of food with others, and want to thank you for
sending in food items with your child.
The drive will continue through Tuesday, November 17.
In addition, the children continue to engage in Block and
Dramatic Play with greater sophistication.
Divertido con Espanol / Fun with Spanish
Rosalba
continued to reinforce Gifts from the Earth en Espanol with a craft featuring
maiz y palomita!
Vocabalo de Semana en Espanol / Words of the Week
in Spanish
Cafe /
Brown
Vegetales
/ Vegetables
Maize /
Corn
Brocoli /
Broccoli
Zanahoria
/ Carrot
Apio /
Celery
Looking Deeper: Exploration and Learning through Play
This week I would like to guide you through a closer look at
Block Play.
At its most basic level, Block Play provides exercise of
both fine and gross motor skills. Block
building provides the children with opportunities to think, plan, collaborate
and problem solve while moving freely and working with their whole body.
Mathematically, building with blocks helps the children to
understand and practice classification as they observe and sort blocks
according to size and shape. They learn
about cause and effect, spatial relationships, balance, area, length, width,
weight, and quantity, as they select, build, and put away blocks. Blocks help children learn through experience
the purpose of number.
In terms of stages, children begin by carrying blocks and
simply piling them up. As their
development progresses, layering begins, leading to connecting blocks,
facilitating the emergence of roads, towers, enclosures and unique building
designs.
Block Play is also a catalyst for social interaction and
language development, as the children work, share, collaborate and problem solve
as they construct.
At present, we have Unit Blocks in the classroom. In a few weeks we will rotate large Waffle
Blocks into the room, then large Hollowed Blocks in February and end the year
with Unit Blocks once again. I look
forward to sharing many more photos of the children's block play over the
course of the year, allowing you to observe the growth in complexity and
sophistication of their structures.
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