"Our view of children strongly determines if we support and challenge them or direct and correct them. Adults must believe that children deserve the right to choose and are capable of understanding that with rights come responsibility. If we believe this, then we will use our role to coach children in making good choices."
These are the words of Deb Curtis and Jess Guiney in their Exchange article, "Seeing and Supporting Children's Right to Choose," which serves as the basis for Exchange's newest Out of the Box Training Kit by the same name. The authors give an example of how to support children in making choices:
"A teacher who values autonomy in decision making will organize his classroom so that materials are accessible to children — and so that children are responsible for the care of those materials. Children benefit from an environment that is intentionally designed and well provisioned with engaging materials so they are able to see what is available. The arrangement and care of the environment communicates to the children the value of focus, collaboration, and choices for complex play and learning."
Note: This article was initially posted on April 8; however, it has come to our attention that many ExchangeEveryDay subscribers did not receive it.
40% Off OOBs for 48 Hours Only!
Enter coupon code oob40 when prompted.
Run a professional development training session with Exchange's popular Out of the Box Training Kits. An article from Exchange magazine serves as the foundation for each Kit and is included as a handout.
Each Kit includes step-by-step instructions to prepare, conduct, and evaluate your training session. The Kits are also flexible enough to allow you to include your own ideas and exercises to meet any special needs of your staff. Offer applied to PDF versions only.
(Sale ends 11:59 PST 05/05/2016. Not valid on bulk purchase discounts. Offer applied to PDF versions only. May not be combined with any other offer.)
Comments (1)
Displaying 1 CommentClayton Early Learning
Denver, CO, United States
This was worth repeating. I shared it with all teaching staff back in April. There was some good feedback
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