Children developing an Intellectual Disposition... What is an Intellectual Disposition?
A habit of mind and action, or tendencies to respond to categories of experience across classes of situations.
Engaging Children's Minds by Lilian Katz and Sylvia Chard
p.34
Today I am asking you all to think about what receiving an Education means for you and your children?
When we think of a building, we understand that the base is the foundation for the entire structure. If the base is not strong, the building will eventually collapse.
If we think about our children's education this way, we understand that these beginning years (0-5) are the most critical for strengthening the base onto which a life will be layered on top of.
"Education is not the preparation for life , Education is life!"
John Dewey
Therefore, I hope it makes sense to you that my goals for the Education of your children address strengthening the disposition to: analyze, hypothesize, synthesize, to predict and check predictions, to theorize about cause-effect relationships, the consequences of actions, to be empirical, to strive for accuracy, etc...
p.35 Engaging Children's Minds
Here we observe 3 golf balls in his tray, because we are open to this possibility, we don't ask him to return 2 for other children to use, we don't say "You're supposed to just use 1!", we instead encourage a thoughtful experiment. B. (and other children if they are asked to notice) can hypothesize what might happen with the 3 balls. Will they split into different directions, will they all travel together? Why? What tracks will be left behind? If we already know what happens with 1 ball, why not discover what might be different with 3? Do you know?What is it about children and sand? And water, too?
So many of the children in both my arts and science classes end up here in the sandbox or at the Water table.
I read a great article today: http://www.earlychildhoodnews.com/earlychildhood/article_view.aspx?ArticleID=62
Here's some of my favorite excerpts:
There is no right way to use sand. It invites participation; it permits children to make and test hypotheses; it stretches the imagination; it provides a potentially soothing sensory experience; and it is an excellent avenue for children to learn physical, cognitive, and social skills.
Because sand play is open-ended, the child determines the direction and path of his or her own play. This freedom then clears the way for the child to build developmental concepts.
What Can Children Learn From Playing in Sand?
Sand play promotes physical development. Large muscle skills develop as children dig, pour, sift, scoop, and clean up spills with brush and dustpan. Eye-hand coordination and small muscle control improve as children learn to manipulate sand accessories.
Sand play also promotes social skills. When children work together at the sand table they are faced with real problems that require sharing, compromising, and negotiating. A group may engage in dramatic play as they "cook," construct roadways, dig tunnels, or create a zoo for rubber animals. As children take on roles associated with their dramatic play, they learn important social skills such as empathy and perspective taking.
Listen To the Water!
Sing your Way Home!
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