When times are easy and there’s plenty to go around, individual species can go it alone. But when conditions are harsh and life is tenuous, it takes a team sworn to reciprocity to keep life going forward...So say the lichens.
-Robin Wall Kimmerer, Braiding Sweetgrass
In the segment "Music, Movement and Active Play," in the new Exchange video training product Addressing Challenging Behaviors: Promoting Social and Emotional Health in Young Children, early childhood experts Dan Gartrell, Peter Pizzolongo, Sandra Heidemann, Daniel Hodgins, Tanya Hollings, Thomas Moore. Kristie Ibraheem and Steve Gross talk about the importance of active play. Dan Gartrell opens the discussion by noting...
"When teachers make their programs more physically active,
when they increase activity levels,
when they do more individual choice activities,
when they do more things in small groups...
you start to have a program that is more developmentally appropriate for a broader span of students."
View "Music Movement and Active Play"
Adventures in Risky Play What is Your Yes? Use coupon code PLAY at checkout for 15% off this title.
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Adventures in Risky Play: What is Your Yes? goes to the heart of risk-taking and children. As educators working with young children, we all have boundaries and feelings around what risky play is allowed. Rusty Keeler invites us to examine the cage of boundaries that we have created for ourselves and our children. He challenges us to rattle our cage and discover where the lines are movable. In our role as educators and caretakers, when we allow children to play and confront risk on their own terms, we see them develop, hold their locus of control and make choices on how to navigate the bumpy terrain of a situation. What better teaching tool for life is there?
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Offer ends 4/13/22 at 11:59 pm Pacific. May not be combined with any other offer. Not valid on past purchases or bulk discounts.
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Comments (1)
Displaying 1 CommentCSBC
Denver, CO, United States
The except says that "when teachers make their programs more physically active...." The problem is that in more and more programs, the teachers are required by inappropriate standards, academic focus, bad discipline policies, and poorly developed curricula to engage in passive, teacher-directed activities. I think it's often not accurate or fair to simply expect teachers to change.
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