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Promoting Excellence in Early Childhood Education
by Deborah J. Stewart on July 7, 2010
in Cognitive Development,Emotional Development,Social Development,The Value of Play
Tagged as: collage, Creative Art, Social Skills, stamping
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{ 6 comments… read them below or add one }
Hi! You know, usually I advise against large group activities in classrooms with multiple languages, but I can see the value of these examples. I’m really glad you shared these. The problem with different languages in a whole group lesson in preschool is that the teacher can’t connect with each individual child to be sure what they are learning from the experience and the children who speak other languages get ‘lost in the sauce’. But, that’s a concern when teachers try to force whole group teacher-directed lessons on the class. When children can share in a big art project like the example here, this would give the children plenty of time to explore, to observe each other’s discoveries and to chatter with each other for some great home language experiences. These examples give me some new thoughts about how a big art experience lets diverse children ‘explore, collaborate, communicate and create’!
Thank you Karen for your thoughtful comments. I share your concern about finding the right approach to whole group activities. I enjoyed watching both classes as they relaxed and played together. In a sense, this was not about the art as much as it was about spending time together and sharing a common experience in the process. I hope others will read your comment above – I appreciate your thoughts immensely.
I try to do at least one large group art activity for every unit we cover. The kids love working with each other on a big project and the language that goes on is awesome!
I see large group activities as the most important thing we do at our school. Learning to work together, to learn from one another, to be able to say “Look what we did,” rather than “Look what I did,” is why we educate children in groups. I’ve found that large group activities tend accelerate learning in a way that one-on-one or small group activities simply can’t.
Thanks for this post, Deborah!
Teacher Tom´s last blog ..The Water Wall Extension And A Home Made Ladder
Thank you Tom – I always value your perspective. I too find large group to provide many benefits. I think it is all in the approach. I also find that when all the children sit together doing something interesting and engaging, they will spend more time at it.
I think children should do large group art activities every once in a while! Though a 1-on-1 activity may help the child focus more, the large group activities teach the children all about teamwork and working together! It allows children to rely on classmates and to take turns! It teaches them to give way and help each other! I remember how a series of large group art activities helped my class become closer to each other… and actually taught them how to share!