Tuesday, September 27, 2016

Sample Lesson Plans

     In Kindergarten classrooms are bright up for 5 years old. Children can learn anything about the world through play. Subject areas aren’t separate in their minds or in the classroom. The objects in  preschool find on a nature walk, such as: feathers, rocks and leaves. It might help them figure out math concepts like big, bigger, and biggest or motivate them to visit the book corner to find out more about birds. The teachers may introduce children to basic concepts, such as: shapes, letters, and colors, but preschool is about learning much more than what a circle looks like. It is where children first develop a relationship with learning. Kindergarten offers a small class size with big opportunities, where children get the necessary tools to succeed in elementary school.
    
     Some people are arguing that Common Core Standards are too demanding, pushing young children too far, too fast and resulting in developmentally. Others are arguing that these standards are not only attainable but a key to improving U.S. education. Common Core Standards are expectations about what children know and are able to do it. The Common Core Standards, the end of kindergarten, children can ask and answer questions about unknown words in a text. A child will be able to answer the teacher’s question. The Common Core Standards address what to teach, but they do not tell teachers how to teach. There are many different ways to help students learn to ask and answer questions about unknown words in a text. The Common Core Standards don’t specify which techniques a teacher should and shouldn’t use it. One can have standards without any large-scale, high-stakes testing, large-scale, high-stakes testing can exits. So are the Common Core Standards expectations for what kindergarten know and are able to do too high? The short answer is “Not in the hands of a teacher who knows how to address them appropriately.” The problem, of course, is that not every teacher knows this.

     
     Younger children love the make believe of pretending to be grown up. No matter how the children to bring the real world into the classroom. Bring in a guest speaker who works in a field connected to children. They want to know about the weather and the best historical sites to visit before they go, and they learn about the country in a fun way. Choose a topic that will interest your community, such as: a collection of stories about local history or a research assignment on the prevalence of litter, graffiti, or another problem in your community. Children should have the opportunity to receive feedback from their findings.

No comments:

Post a Comment