Erin Williams Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/erin-williams/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Mon, 22 Jan 2018 22:37:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Early Learning Center teaches children 鈥 and future educators /now/news/2018/early-learning-center-teaches-children-future-educators/ /now/news/2018/early-learning-center-teaches-children-future-educators/#comments Fri, 19 Jan 2018 17:30:11 +0000 /now/news/?p=36545 Free to pursue their interests, the seven two-year-olds spread about the room, some pushing toy cars and trucks across the floor, others shaping green playdough at a low table.

And at another table, practicum student Kelsey Troyer led a lesson: Her own.

黑料正能量 touts its (ELC) as a 鈥渃hild-centered, developmentally appropriate preschool program鈥 whose 鈥渆mergent鈥 curriculum enables teachers 鈥渢o be sensitive to the cues of the children and their interests.鈥

黑料正能量 practicum student Amber Olson works with a student outside.

But that鈥檚 only part of the picture, because the ELC is also a place where 黑料正能量 students gain real-world education experience.

Elementary education students studying classroom management and organization meet in the college classroom twice a week, but for their third session spend time at the ELC, located in Park View Mennonite Church just blocks from campus.

鈥淵ou can imagine how this sparks classroom discussion and brings deeper understanding of the educational theories we study together,鈥 said instructor . 鈥淚 would not want to teach educational theory any other way.鈥

While many education courses at 黑料正能量 have a practicum component, the ELC is unique, as it is 黑料正能量鈥檚 鈥渧ery own lab school,鈥 Yoder said. This means that Yoder and ELC director are 鈥渆qually invested in student progress and learning. We are colleagues and co-teachers, and share philosophy and goals,鈥 Yoder said.

The lessons

The ELC experience challenges 黑料正能量 students to think on their feet both responsively and proactively.

As students meandered to and from her table, Troyer invited one or two at a time to join in mixing blue and pink shaving cream on pieces of black paper.

Troyer had designed the lesson to help students explore what happens when colors are mixed, and to play with patterns. But with the ELC classroom鈥檚 lead teacher taking notes and giving feedback, Troyer was the one learning.

鈥淲hat could you do to help support her?鈥 Williams asked Troyer when one student hesitated at delving into the shaving cream mess.

Miranda Stroop, a work-study student from 黑料正能量, reads to Micah.

鈥淒o you want a brush?鈥 Troyer asked the child. 鈥淲hat happens when you put the paintbrush in there?鈥 and, later, 鈥淲hat happens if you swirl it around on your paper?鈥

The little girl laughed as she mixed the colors.

鈥淒o you still see pink and blue?鈥 Troyer asked her. 鈥淒o you see purple?鈥

With shaving cream now up the girl鈥檚 arms to her elbows and over the edges of the paper, Williams reflected for Troyer: 鈥淢aybe next time, use bigger paper,鈥 she said.

Later, Troyer said that鈥檚 one of the things she鈥檚 learning: to notice even during an activity about what works 鈥 or doesn鈥檛 鈥 so she can 鈥渕odify the lesson to make it run smoothly for the next student.鈥

She鈥檚 also learning how to be careful with words.

鈥淚nstead of giving empty praise and saying 鈥榞ood job,鈥欌 she said, 鈥淚鈥檝e learned to give more specific feedback, like, 鈥榃ow, I see you鈥檝e covered your whole paper in paint.鈥欌

Across the hall in the four-year-olds classroom, her classmate Cody Trumbo, too, was also teaching and learning.

He had prepared magazines, scissors and glue sticks on a nearby table for a collage-making project, and went to gather recruits from among a group of students huddled around the water play table.

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to make a project today,鈥 he said. 鈥淎re you okay with that?鈥

鈥淯mm, no,鈥 one honest student replied.

Working with young students in a classroom setting like these two boys, 黑料正能量 practicum students get a feel for what teaching might be like before they embark fully on the education major curriculum.

Diener stepped in with some advice for Trumbo, suggesting that he not ask permission but instead tell the students it is their turn.

鈥淚t鈥檚 all about phrasing,鈥 he reflected later. It鈥檚 called 鈥減olite command,鈥 and it has to be clear and not indicative of choice when there isn鈥檛 any.

鈥淭his is tougher than one might imagine, simply because we are forced to stop and think through every phrase we say and translate it into ways that the children totally understand,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 trying to get used to it.鈥

What future teachers say

Trumbo said the types of things he and other practicum students are learning at the ELC are practical 鈥 like how to engage students with differing levels of motivation, or getting a sense of one鈥檚 own teaching self in a real-life setting.

鈥淭his sort of opportunity is invaluable,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t makes us feel more confident about the teachers we are becoming, and gives us an honest glimpse into what education can be like.鈥

Diener said that 鈥渨ithout exception,鈥 practicum students in their weekly reflections report growing comfort with interacting with the ELC students. By the end of each semester, she said, 鈥淚 observe many positive gains in their self confidence and teaching skills.鈥

In retrospect, too, past ELC practicum students 鈥 and there are over 500 of them, Diener said 鈥 value their time at ELC.

Alyssa Green, an 黑料正能量 graduate who is now a kindergarten teacher in a nearby public school, said that her ELC experience taught her to be conscious of students鈥 perceptions of her words and actions, and that simple language changes can promote student sharing and creativity. The ELC鈥檚 emphasis on exploratory play, too, has shaped her instruction methods.

鈥淚t truly stuck with me that play is still so important for young kiddos!鈥 she said recently.

Senior April Shinsky said that the flexible structure in the ELC鈥檚 two-year-olds鈥 classroom is freeing for the children 鈥 and was for her, too. 鈥淚 loved being able to engage with the learners on their own terms,鈥 she said, 鈥渁nd having a real hands-on experience in what it means to truly design curriculum that meets the learners鈥 developmental needs.鈥

A variety of activities engage students throughout the day at the ELC.

Victoria Messick, also a senior, said that the child-centered learning environment embodied what she had learned in coursework: letting learners guide themselves. 鈥淚 recognized how important it is as a teacher to make meaningful connections between the child鈥檚 lived experiences and learning,鈥 she said.

Appropriate foundation

The other students in the ELC 鈥 the children 鈥 benefit, too. Yoder said that her own daughter attended there when she was four, and is now a college freshman studying to be a teacher.

鈥淎s a parent, I was grateful for the strong developmentally appropriate foundation the ELC gave my daughter,鈥 Yoder said. 鈥淗er confidence soared that year.鈥

Many students remain with the ELC for all of their three preschool years, and Diener, who has worked at the ELC since 1993 as an assistant teacher, teacher and then director, said that their daily engagement in the stimulating environment designed to meet their needs cultivates 鈥渢hriving as they happily and busily learn about their world.鈥

It鈥檚 鈥渁 different kind of preschool,鈥 said Meg Hertzler, another 黑料正能量 education student in the four-year-old classroom, where she had just read a book to students nestled in and around a clawfoot tub outfitted with pillows. 鈥淚t鈥檚 play and learn, not teach and learn.鈥

The history

The ELC was founded in 1977, when 黑料正能量鈥檚 education department saw the need in its program for the early childhood education students to work more closely in an early learning setting. The department wanted the students to have opportunities to observe and work with young children in a learning environment appropriate to their developmental needs.

The ELC curriculum is based on the Developmental Interaction Theory of child psychology, which 鈥渁ttempts to nurture the physical, emotional, mental, social, creative, and spiritual self of each child.鈥 Children are 鈥渄eveloping human beings鈥 and learn most easily by actual, unhurried involvement with people, activities and the environment. The curriculum changes and evolves in response to cues and suggestions from students.

That translates into a wide variety of experiences for the students, from cooking and woodworking, field trips, painting, cutting and pasting, music, puzzles, outdoor play even in the snow and writing. Even dress guidelines in the parent handbook promote students鈥 engagement: 鈥淭heir actions should not be inhibited by clothing.鈥

鈥淒espite current trends to move academics down into preschool,鈥 said Diener, 鈥渙ur mission of being a child centered, developmentally oriented program has remained the same since our founding.鈥

]]>
/now/news/2018/early-learning-center-teaches-children-future-educators/feed/ 2