| The nursery program at Peninsula School
provides a loving, trusting, and respectful environment. It is socially
and physically a friendly, stimulating community in which children
are supported and encouraged to make choices, resolve conflicts
productively, respect their own feelings and those of others, feel
loved, and be loving.
We believe that play is one of the most important
sources of learning. Through play, children develop essentials such
as body image as they use their bodies for climbing, running, swinging,
digging, or other activities. Play helps children learn to understand
themselves and others. It also aids in the development of social
skills such as making friends, dealing with conflict, recognizing
and expressing feelings, working together with peers to build and
create things, and experiencing the many aspects of community life.
We provide ample time and space for play.
Much of the day is structured so that children make their own choices.
Children choose the activities in which they will participate, whether
outside or in, active or quiet, messy or clean. They choose the
clothing they wear, and when, what, and how much to eat. They learn
to discover and follow their own interests.
Teachers help children resolve their conflicts
in a constructive way. Children are helped to articulate their feelings
and needs, to identify what they want and to ask for it. The goal
is always to help children learn to work out their own problems,
first with the support and guidance of a teacher, and later independently.
Children and teachers gather daily for juice
time, where a snack is offered, a story is read, and topics of general
interest are discussed. The rest of the day finds children moving
freely from one activity to another-dress-up, drawing, painting,
sorting, matching, digging, swinging, singing, climbing, cooking,
or whatever else seems appealing. A group of children might use
shovels and a hose to construct a waterway, a wonderful opportunity
to explore the planning, sharing, and communication needs of a group
project as well as certain basic laws of physics. Another day, helping
in the garden, finding worms for the compost pile, or practicing
a new rope swing strategy might be the central activities for many
of the children. |