Showing posts with label safari animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label safari animals. Show all posts

Monday, May 27, 2019

Richmond Zoo and Animals from Africa!


It is summer break at Harmony's House, so family-tripping is happenin'!  Toddler "K" and Baby "E" got to go to the zoo and see the REAL animals from Africa that we have been learning about in school.  Epic field trip!  O_O


Flamingo- these flamingoes are actually the South American kind, but Africa has their own variety too!


Fennec fox

Meerkat

 Rhinoceros


Zebra


Ostrich


Giraffe- yes we were really THIS close!  We fed and petted these beautiful animals.  It was A-M-A-Z-I-N-G!  Of course what Toddler "K" recalls about the giraffes is that the female peed while we were there.  She said, "Potty outside!  Yes!"




Baby "E" elephant ;)


Pygmy hippopotamus

Please share our adventure with your school friend and see how many animals they can name!

Thursday, May 23, 2019

Safari Binoculars


Set your sights high!  (Especially if you are looking for the mysterious giraffe of Harmony’s House plains!)  We wrapped up our spring session today with a bit of African savanna, pinwheels, dirt and waffle blocks. Too much fun!!!





Monday, May 20, 2019

Working with Safari Animals


Teachers like lesson plans.  And a lot of preschool teachers like themed lesson plans.  It helps the teachers feel like they've "covered all the bases" academically speaking, and to some extent, there is value in this.  Themes allow teachers to bring ideas into the classroom that the children might be experiencing (e.g. going to kindergarten soon, worrying about thunderstorms), want to learn more about (e.g. specific community helpers or animals), or help them to notice something that they otherwise wouldn't (e.g. how shadows change relative to light sources).  Making plans relating to these themes allow teachers to tick off academic skills or material that they want to teach.

But it is also just as important, or even more so, to acknowledge the value in the free play that happens during the children's Work Time.  This work that the children pursue of their own agendas can be just as academic, noteworthy, and developmentally productive as what the teacher has planned for Small Group and Circle Time lessons.  For this reason, this post is dedicated completely to the Work Time plans of the children.  

Yes, the theme that we've been talking about lately has related to grassland animals from Africa (in case the school friends have any zoo trips this summer with their families!), and so the toys provided relate to that... but how they are used is totally up to the school friends.  And, in Work Time, the teacher can discover more interests that the children have.  Working those "academics" into the plans of the children and using the children's ideas for future lesson plans can be the best way to help the children embrace new material in the future.





 









What's with the "Names?"

For new readers of the blog, this post is an explanation of the "names" Ms. Harmony uses when she writes about the school happe...

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