Monday, October 31, 2016

Transitions

By: Beka Meitler
Board Position: Member-at-large
Professional Title: Early Childhood Education Instructor


What is a transition?
A transition is a type of change, movement between, process or period of change. Children transition multiple times a day, often through self-direction or with the assistance of adults.

Top 10 tips on how to best support young children through transitions:

1) Make them minimal.
a. Transitions are a necessary part of each day, but minimizing full group transitions takes away the opportunity for confusion, mistaken behaviors and misguided engagement. Use small groupings when possible.
b. Think about classroom ratios and ask yourself, “Can I move part of the group with one teacher, instead of the whole group with two teachers?”

2) Make announcements for preparation.
a. Give children warnings before transitions occur. These are most effective when done one-on-one, using visual cues such as dimming the lights or holding up a “5-minute hand,” or with a familiar tune. For example, “Sunshine Room... 5 minutes.”

3) Make them FUN!
a. Use song, movement, chants and PLAY to support moving from one activity to the next or from indoors to outdoors. For example, “If you’re ready to go outside, touch your head (feet, nose, shoulders, shoes, hips).”

4) Make community decisions about them.
a. Encourage the children to help identify moving through a transition safely. For example, “Who can you find to be your partner?” “How can your body keep us safe?”
b. What does the line-up look like? Is there enough physical space for groups of children?

5) Make them consistent.
a. When a transition happens at relatively the same time of day or in the same sequence, children begin to predict the timing of the transition and become successful at self-directed periods of change. (i.e. clean up, snack time, nap time)

6) Make teachers the models.
a. Teachers are a vital part in the transition process and can encourage engagement of children by being actively involved.
b. Keep your mind on during these important parts of the day.
c. Model expectations include cleaning up WITH the children, and preparing areas by cleaning up materials children are not using before clean up time begins.

7) Make them a NEW learning opportunity.
a. Children use many skills throughout the day, but transitioning with multiple steps can be challenging. Break down the sequence of steps into learning opportunities. (i.e. first, next, last)
b. A good rule of thumb is the younger the child, the fewer steps you should use.
c. We want to view transitions as learning times, not just a way to move from one learning space/activity to another. Life skills are learned through transitions.

8) Make them age-appropriate.
a. Adding more children or steps to the process will make it less successful.
b. Hurrying a toddler slows down the pace to the speed of a turtle. Be patient and see #6.

9) Make sure YOU are prepared.
a. Prepping the classroom ahead of time cuts down the wait time children experience each day as they move from activity to activity. Give yourself five extra minutes in the morning before children arrive to prep for group times, outdoor play, small groups, activities and meal times.

10) Evaluate your transition.
a. Are they successful? How and why?
b. What parts of the day can you remove whole group transitions and, in turn, use small groups or individual transitions to support children?
c. Have a co-worker or supervisor help evaluate transitions throughout the year. What works with one group of children may need adjustments as new children join the classroom.

Reference: Larson, N., Henthorne, M., Plum, B. (1994) Transition Magician: Strategies for Guiding Young Children in Early Childhood Programs. Readleaf Press St. Paul, MN

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Grandparents as Primary Play Partners

By Gayle Stuber


Grandparents are often the adults picking up and dropping off the children in your care. They also may be the primary caregivers for their grandchildren. How can you help them support and enhance the learning of their young grandchildren?

As a child care provider, you can be a neutral party—one who understands the learning and social-emotional needs of the child, as well as the needs of the family AND the extended family, i.e. grandparents. If the grandparent is the primary care provider (no or little parent involved on a consistent basis, for example), you can be a strong support by providing activities and ideas for a learning environment that enhances child growth and development.

The specific activities will depend upon the age and needs of the child, and resources of the family and community. Many of the activities you do with the children in your care can also, with some tweaking, be done by grandparents at home. They will appreciate your help and the children will benefit from more learning time.

Things to consider:
1. Be sure that the materials are easy to find in a home and are age appropriate for the child. Consider and be sure to share if there are any safety issues that could arise.

2. Describe the skills the activity will support and why they are important for the child. Connect the skills to the Kansas Early Learning Standards if you have a copy. Draw connections to school readiness and success. For example, reading a book to a child supports literacy activities such as listening to a story (Communication and Literacy Standard, Informational Text (CL.IT).

3. List any prerequisite skills. Does the child need to have mastered specific skills in order to complete the activity? For example, if a child wants to sort buttons, this is an activity for preschool-aged children, not younger children who may still be putting small items in their mouths. Sorting also requires an understanding of "same and different." For young children, even infants, this could be something as simple as big and little. Older preschoolers can sort by number of holes or color.

4. Provide some examples of how the grandparent might "scaffold" or help the child more easily complete the activity. Explain how to start at a level where the adult helps the child complete the activity and then slowly moves to letting/encouraging the child complete the activity independently. For example, helping a child fit a piece into a puzzle by moving the piece close to the correct space and, eventually, letting the child put the piece into the space independently.


Click here to view NAEYC's "Marketing in a Backpack" article, Finding Low-Cost Materials and Toys for Home Learning, for more great ideas.