My Many Colored Expressions

The use of group projects in a curriculum can be very useful, especially in bringing difficult concepts to the preschool level. To bring these concepts to fruition, all participants must, in a sense, become learners along with the children.

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The teacher has to be careful to not act as a mentor but as a guide; that is, the teacher cannot think solely in terms of a prearranged destination to activity but must focus on offering a sense of discipline to the activity. Feelings and emotions consist of many complex components, and because of this, we must be creative in teaching our little ones about them!

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For this activity, we used play dough to convey a variety of emotions. Your little ones worked together to best determine what expression they wanted to portray. Following the construction of these faces, students were asked to name the feelings they created.

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Egg-spressions

Plastic eggs serve many purposes. They can be sought out, filled with goodies, and in our case, used as a teaching medium!

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During the course of our Feelings Week, we talked about emotions, and the muscles we use in our faces to create them. We learned that one can express happiness not only with their mouths but with their eyes! To help reinforce this concept, we created a variety of emotion-faces with plastic eggs. Because plastic eggs consist of two components, the top half was affixed with eyes and a nose, while the bottom half contained a mouth. With a simple twist, your little ones created a great number of silly and not so silly expressions!

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Emotions Bean Bag Toss

Games are a natural group form. They provide personal, wholehearted, unselfconscious involvement in activities that allow us to feel free to absorb and integrate our experiences and add them to our growing knowledge of ourselves.

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Whether it’s a birthday party or a summer picnic, games are a great way to involve all kids in being active. Preschool is a time of building identity and self-esteem, so we encourage every child in our class to enjoy group games and find ways to make sure that everyone is able to participate.

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For this activity, we used bean bags that we tossed onto a piece of butcher paper. On this paper were four different faces. Your little one was instructed to toss their bean bag onto a face, name the emotion, and then talk about something in their lives that may trigger that emotion.

Feelings Collages

Collages are fun and inexpensive and allow children to practice creative and problem-solving skills. We try to use as many open-ended activities as possible, so your child is motivated to think divergently. Open ended materials are those which young children can use for creative play in any way they like, within a set of guidelines for safety and clean up.

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Open-ended materials are like open-ended questions. There is no “one” answer or one “right” way to use them. Any child can enjoy, and be successful in creating with crayons, markers, clays, paper and glue, finger-paint and paint.

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Using open-ended materials nurtures both the child’s creativity and self esteem. Blocks, dress ups, props, recycled items, and natural materials like seeds, earth, sand, and water are also open ended materials which can be used in many ways. For our art activities, we include a lot of open-ended materials for your little one to learn from. This activity included magazine clippings that your child placed into “happy” and “sad” categories. There was no right or wrong answer. Each child separated the two groups according to their own understanding of the various facial expressions they saw on the clippings.

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Feeling Faces

The use of group projects in a curriculum can be very useful, especially in bringing difficult concepts to the preschool level. To bring these concepts to fruition, all participants must, in a sense, become learners along with the children.

feelingmagnet

The teacher has to be careful to not act as a mentor but as a guide; that is, the teacher cannot think solely in terms of a prearranged destination to activity but must focus on offering a sense of discipline to the activity. Feelings and emotions consist of many complex components, and because of this, we must be creative in teaching our little ones about them! For this activity, we separated a variety of magazine clippings into four categories: happy, sad, angry, and surprised. Your little ones worked together to best determine whether the expression on the clipping was one of these emotions.

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F is for Feelings

Literacy for children birth to five refers to the skills and abilities that are the forerunners of conventional reading and writing. Learning to read and write does not happen overnight. It is the result of many cumulative, interrelated experiences beginning at birth. Many different kinds of experiences are needed, but three are essential.

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Children need purposeful conversation among adults and other children that supports their developing language; access to many different, high quality, developmentally appropriate books and other reading and writing materials; and opportunities to playfully explore and engage in literacy activities involving reading, writing, and learning letters and sounds. Young children learn from experience. From the earliest days of life, they get messages from their environment about what is important and what has meaning.

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This is why all early childhood environments need to be rich in literacy enhancing materials and experiences.

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Literacy-rich environments are literally full of opportunities for reading and writing, but they are not overwhelming or overstimulating. Print should be used for real purposes or functions, not as clutter.

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For this reason, we are constantly accessing our environments for literary materials; things to help us not only practice our writing, but create and recognize language in print form. During our Feelings and Emotions week, we talked about the letter F, and engaged in an array of activities aimed at strengthening our understanding of this letter and its function.

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One of these included a group activity, that included placing cardboard Fs into a larger F. The second involved using q-tips to place tiny dots inside block letter Fs.

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Playdoh Expressions

Brain research indicates that emotion and cognition are profoundly interrelated processes. Specifically, recent cognitive neuroscience findings suggest that the neural mechanisms underlying emotion regulation may be the same as those underlying cognitive processes.

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Emotion and cognition work together, jointly informing the child’s impressions of situations and influencing behavior. Most learning in the early years occurs in the context of emotional supports.

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Together, emotion and cognition contribute to attentional processes, decision making, and learning. Emotions and social behaviors affect the young child’s ability to persist in goal-oriented activity, to seek help when it is needed, and to participate in and benefit from relationships.

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To help your little one gain an understanding of the various facial expressions that we may all, at one time, exhibit, we created a variety of different ones with play dough. Using a blank face as their template, your little one constructed different emotional states with their friends!

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Fishing for Feelings

How do children start to understand who they are, what they are feeling, what they expect to receive from others?

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These concepts are at the heart of their social-emotional wellness.

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They contribute to a child’s self-confidence and empathy, her ability to develop meaningful and lasting friendships and partnerships, and her sense of importance and value to those around her.

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Children’s social-emotional development influences all other areas of development: Cognitive, motor, and language development are all greatly affected by how a child feels about herself and how she is able to express ideas and emotions.

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One component of this concept lies in the ability to detect emotions in others.

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To do this, we went fishing for our feelings!

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Each student was encouraged to select a picture of a person with a particular expression, imitate it, and then name something that made them feel similar.

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Rock Faces

The California Department of Education (CDE), Early Education and Support Division (EESD), provides a guiding framework for early childhood care and education through the development and dissemination of resources and development activities.

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The preschool learning foundations describe research-based competencies, or knowledge and skills, that can be expected for most children to exhibit at around 48 and 60 months of age when participating in a quality preschool program.

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The foundations apply to all preschool children, including children whose home language is not English and children with disabilities. One of these competencies includes the Social-Emotional Developmental Domain.

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Social-emotional development includes the child’s experience, expression, and management of emotions and the ability to establish positive and rewarding relationships with others. It encompasses both intra- and interpersonal processes.

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The core features of emotional development include the ability to identify and understand one’s own feelings, to accurately read and comprehend emotional states in others, to manage strong emotions and their expression in a constructive manner, to regulate one’s own behavior, to develop empathy for others, and to establish and maintain relationships.

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To foster these skills in your little ones, we participated in a host of different activities during our week of feelings and literature. For this particular project, we used painted rocks to create a variety of different facial expressions.

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