Early Childhood Innovation and Discovery with Amy Weaver-Consultant

Early Childhood Innovation and Discovery with Amy Weaver-Consultant This page is for anyone who works with young children, has young children or was a young child. Discover the authentic brilliance of young children.

06/01/2020

If anything good can come from COVID it's that Circletime is not only developmentally inappropriate, it's now medically unsafe!! JUST SAY NO TO CIRCLETIME!!!!

Thank you Andrea Zabel for the inspiration on a Monday!

Important Reminders about the effect of all of this on children.
05/24/2020

Important Reminders about the effect of all of this on children.

Statement Regarding School and Childcare Program Re-openings During the Continued Spread of COVID-19

The True Play Foundation makes no general recommendation regarding the safety of reopening early childhood education programs at this time.

Because the spread of COVID-19 varies greatly between localities, regions and nations, and because each community differs in terms of its density, habits and access to resources, there can be no one-size-fits-all guidance for the reopening of early childhood programs.

Further, because of the high degree of uncertainty about the virus, its effects on children, its ability to survive in the air and on surfaces, the unreliability of antibody testing, and many other factors, we urge all responsible authorities to take great care in balancing the risks of any decision to reopen programs in their community. During this decision-making process, it is also important to consider that COVID-19 spreads during pre-symptomatic phases of infection.

However, we believe it is necessary to state the following in the strongest possible terms: enforced social distancing for young children in early childhood settings is not in the best interests of the emotional well-being of the child; it is not enforceable, and it runs counter to all that we understand about the needs of young children for play, connection, self-determination and joy.

We recommend in the strongest possible terms that early childhood programs that are considering reopening continue to create safe, hygienic environments for young children, and that all feasible steps are taken to prevent the further spread of COVID-19. However, safe environments for young children and teachers cannot be defined by an experience of behavioral control and policing, fear, and unrealistic expectations that run directly counter to the needs of the child. Social distancing for young children in public spaces with the support of close family is fundamentally different from social distancing in a school setting.

Children need self-directed, self-determined play (risk, joy, and engagement), the experience of being heard and seen (love and trust), and the opportunity to reflect in order to process their lived reality. This is always important. It is particularly important now. Creating the environment for these experiences should be the primary function of early childhood education programs.

As with all programs that seek to meet the needs of young children, we strongly recommend that all programs, whether in person or in “distance learning” settings, create spaces for children to have unmediated, uninterrupted interactions with each other and opportunities for reflection on their own experience without adults guiding the child to particular adult-defined insights or learning outcomes.

**The True Play Foundation seeks to support the work of educators and communities in every part of the world who are committed to creating practices, programs and policies that protect and support the right of every child—regardless of race, religion, gender identity, sexual orientation, class or externally defined ability—to uninterrupted, self-determined True Play.**

04/06/2020

This comes from someone in my neighborhood. I love it!

Borrowed from a friend..A principal sent an email tonight regarding the closure of all AZ schools until the end of the school year. He had a great message that I thought more parents NEED to hear! You got this!

This is my advice for those who have been thrust into schooling your kids at home due to the coronavirus COVID-19 shutdowns. You are NOT homeschooling. You are CRISIS schooling. Crisis schooling is stressful and even trauma-inducing.

Being at home all day is NOT our normal! Our kids are not used to being locked in their houses all day long. Children are grieving right now. Out of the blue, they lost a lot. It is wonderful that so many classes are going online, but it's not the same. They lost their in-person time with friends, their daily routine and the predictability of life that gives us security.

HONOR that grief process! Don't expect to just jump into a perfect program and learn, learn, learn. Expect them to act out. Expect them to not want to get out of bed. Expect them to not have words to express their inner turmoil.

YOU are grieving and experiencing loss. Give yourself a lot of GRACE! Even some of us veterans in education are struggling because our security has been yanked from under our feet. Some of you have lost jobs or your spouses have lost jobs. Those who are working are afraid of going out. Some of you have been to 5 grocery stores and still do not have what you need. Our society has been turned upside down. Give yourself a break.

It is okay to NOT be amazing. Don't try to be Pinterest Homeschool Mom/Dad of the Year. Even she/he is not that way all the time and truthfully there is at least one messy room in her/his house. Something always has to give. Those perfect people online have the same 24 hours in each day. From experience, I can tell you, something always gives no matter how perfect people pretend to be.

When you have 32 kids in a class, it takes a lot of time to get all 32 of them to turn to page 32, take out pencils, get their paper, stop pulling their friend's hair. There are natural distractions with a big class that do not happen in a small one. You will get done fast!

Don't artificially create busywork to do school for 6 hours a day. That is soul-sucking, will anger and bore your child and make you tear your hair out. When you're done, you're done! Go do some fun things! Or... even crazier... have fun learning!

If your school did not give you loads of books or worksheets, be glad. Now you can read lots of literature and do hands-on learning! There is a lot of learning that does not end in a worksheet. Read, read, read, read, read!

Get crazy and ask your kids what they are interested in and then learn about that! If your child thinks the solar system is really cool, then read about the solar system, look up YouTube videos about it, do projects about it. Immerse yourselves in learning and make it fun and engaging. If you do that, your day will fly by and you'll still be learning.

Life will go on if you are not stellar during a worldwide crisis. Maybe your best today will be to cuddle up with the kids and just be together. Maybe your best today is everyone is fed and you didn't cry in front of them. Maybe you did cry and your beautiful babies showed their remarkable best by comforting you in their beautiful little strength.

It's okay and even necessary to be REAL with yourself about what's actually happening. A bomb did not go off, but metaphorically it did. Our lives may never be the same after this. If you crumble, honor that. I promise you, your child will learn. We learn from all of life!

Blessings and love to all of the parents who are taking on this huge challenge! Give yourself grace! You got this!! I believe in you! I have seen parents work miracles in schooling their children. Teachers... my heart goes out to you. You are also on a steep learning curve to serve your students in this time. It's also okay for you to not be amazing."

How awesome is this idea!?!
03/01/2020

How awesome is this idea!?!

Teacher Hack: No more stamp or ink pad messes! ✒️Practice spelling and word work with kinetic sand for portable, compact, hands-on fun. Would you give this hack a try? [via on Instagram]

YES!!! Sorry it took her 21 years to figure that out though
02/13/2020

YES!!! Sorry it took her 21 years to figure that out though

I posted deep stuff earlier but this is wonderful and made me really smile.
02/01/2020

I posted deep stuff earlier but this is wonderful and made me really smile.

It created a wonderful teaching moment.

EPIPHANY TIMEI've been struggling trying to solve a few problems lately.  At 4:00 am, I figured out something-the answer...
02/01/2020

EPIPHANY TIME
I've been struggling trying to solve a few problems lately. At 4:00 am, I figured out something-the answers are always rooted in early childhood. In all the world's struggles, our youngest have the answers. Understand, I still don't have the answers but I have an understanding of the root of the problems.

Too often we work to solve issues just on the face of the problem. If you don't understand where those problems come from, you are just pulling the tops off the weeds. We are so lucky to work in a career where the world, literally begins. Never forget that the groundwork you are helping to lay, lasts a lifetime!

Great thoughts but shouldn’t we start this earlier?
01/29/2020

Great thoughts but shouldn’t we start this earlier?

University of Georgia education professor Peter Smagorinsky wrote a piece last year about a promisin...

A great perspective to remember.
10/15/2019

A great perspective to remember.

This is so true. (4BoysMother- Melissa Fenton, Writer )

Happy October!  This is my new favorite quote!!
10/03/2019

Happy October! This is my new favorite quote!!

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