Today I had the pleasure of visiting the escuelita class of 2-3 year
olds as they experienced a wonderfully integrated circle time and fall
walk to Village Homes. I soon realized how many things we do well at
Peregrine School were integrated in this experience, so decided to
describe it in this blog entry. I hope it will serve as a snapshot for
parents who are elsewhere and do not see what goes on, as well as for
people interested in Peregrine School.
Twenty seven two and
three year olds were gathered into a circle by Maestra Gaby, who begins
with a song about “hojas”, or leaves. Gaby captivates everyone’s
attention by singing as she holds up some large, crispy, brown fall
leaves and drops them from the air. She then begins a game, in which
she puts two leaves behind her back, one “grande” and one “pequeño”, and
asks them to guess which is on which side. When she reveals each leaf,
the terms for large and small are reinforced. To continue with this
concept, the leaves are then sorted in the middle of the circle, with
Gaby asking if each is “grande” or “pequeño”. The leaves are then
counted: uno, dos, trés… Gaby then asks “Hay muchas hojas o pocas
hojas?” While all this goes on, two teachers support Gaby, holding
children who need help sitting in circle, and two other teachers bring
all children to the bathroom, so that when circle time is over, all
children will be ready to go on a walk.
All of this is so
smooth that it seems easy. But think about all that is going on. Every
teacher is part of a team, backing up others so that children get what
they need socially and physically while the “show” goes on without
interruption. In addition, several interrelated concepts that will
resurface throughout the day and week are introduced. Fall leaves,
which have been discussed before, are featured, because the students
will soon take a walk to collect more leaves. The words “large” and
“small” are also important parts of a unit on size, and sorting and
counting them reinforces math skills as well. And on top of it all, the
whole circle time is a Spanish lesson, reinforced by songs, games and
visuals.
Next Gaby brings out a large Tupperware container in
which beetles that metamorphosed from mealworms are living off of corn
meal and rabbit chow. The children have been watching this process for
months, but now the beetles are adult and can go free. A second purpose
in the fall walk is to let them go to a new home in some mulch under a
tree. There the beetles will be able to make their own home, and lay
their own eggs which will become worms and later beetles just like they
did. Gaby explains this, bilingually, then says that we will miss these
“escarabajos”, but that they will be free, “libre”. Everyone chants
“libre” several times, raising their hands in celebration about the
liberation of the escarabajos.
Gaby explains that in the
classroom we will now have a new insect pet- a plastic case full of
ants- ornigas- which can make trails in a sugar filled container. She
then introduces the three body parts and six legs that the ants have,
and how they carry around crystals of sugar to eat, and instructs the
children that they will look with their eyes but not open up these new
pets.
It is time to go to the park. Everyone stands up and is
led in a chant “ahorra vamos a marchar” which encourages the children to
march in a line to the fence, and, after counting themselves, out the
gate to their walk. The walk is relaxed, because all five teachers and
an intern guide the children, organized with partners, along the
sidewalk and to Village Homes, where they are assembled in a grassy
amphitheatre to eat their snack. After the teachers hand out hand
sanitizer and the snack of home-made vegan pumpkin muffins made by Chef
Alison, pear slices, and water, Gaby reads a story about insect life
stages, giving the students one last time to consider the cycle they
experienced with their meal worms.
The day is beautiful, warm,
fallish, and full of color. Students gather leaves into large baskets
for future art activities, and those who choose to do so take out
beetles one by one and let them free. “Escarabajos libres”, we shout,
hands in the air in celebration. One cannot help but notice that the
children too experience appropriate but celebratory freedom, as they
feel the cool grass where they sit, pet a Village Homes cat and Rosie
the dog, watch their beetles trundle off, and march about through piles
of crunchy leaves.