Each and Every Day – Every day in an early learning program includes:
- Routine Elements – the experiences of simply moving through the day
- Curricular Elements – the experiences of planned, specific learning
- SARA – opportunities for Selection, Action, Reflection, and Application
The Routine Elements of the day include:
- Staging
- Arrival/Separation/Dismissal

- Meals and Snacks
- Transitions
- Hygiene
- Clean Up
- Nap
Staging: Creating the Field of Dreams – This refers to the 30 minutes before the children arrive in the morning and the 30 minutes after the children are dismissed in the afternoon. Staging must assure that both theme-related and generic props, equipment, and materials needed for the day are in place. It should take place while there are no children in attendance and it should be completely finished before any children arrive, so the teacher never has to leave the children’s presence during the day to retrieve materials she didn’t have time to stage that morning.
I totally agree with James Earl Jones, who told Kevin Costner in “Field of Dreams”, “If you build it, they will come.” Setting the stage for the day’s action is VITAL. Plan, but don’t own your plans so fiercely you cannot change them in the middle of the day if it rains, there’s a fire drill, your twos have tantrums, your threes want to wear the high heels to the playground, or your fours throw the blocks rather than recreate the Taj Mahal.
Preschool teachers do not get coffee and potty breaks, so get your Starbucks, your Dunkin’ Donuts, and your toileting finished before you get to work. Try to leave your home worries at home so you’re prepared mentally and emotionally for the day’s work. Plan in advance, communicate with team members, have an informed expectation of what will happen, and alternate plans for unexpected things that might happen during the day – rain, fire drill, sick child, parent visitor, or unexpected negative reaction to offered experiences. Administrators can help a great deal in this area by providing Lead Teachers a minimum of a FULL 30 minutes of paid work time only for staging!
Stage your classroom with all of the things you think the children will want to interact with during the day. Make the room inviting based on your chosen theme and on the strengths you want the children to gain. Set out the materials in your Centers so they are inviting, exciting, alluring, and interesting TO THE CHILDREN. Reggio Emilia programs set up “provocations”, usually using natural materials, mirrors, woven baskets full of raw materials and “loose parts” which might include nuts, bolts, craft materials, stones, sticks.
I love the idea in essence, but have some hesitancy in making the room too “pretty”. It should be appealing from the viewpoint of the children, not the 35-year-old female teacher who’s a big fan of Pinterest, not what parents think a ‘cute’ classroom should look like, and not like every other classroom in your program. I like a minimalist touch with purposeful raw materials displayed, and with walls and doors covered with the children’s art and words. Stage according to your children’s needs.
Next Blog: Arrival, Separation, and Dismissal
You’re Not off the Hook Yet!
As early educators, we do a lot of ‘stuff’ that educators of older children and adults do not do. A few of these are scraping glitter off of tables with popsicle sticks so the janitorial crew doesn’t complain; plunging toilets clogged by stuffed animals and duplo blocks; peeling screaming toddlers from the arms of weeping mothers; checking heads for lice and bottoms for worms; waking up in the middle of the night with “Wheels on the Bus” or “Three Fat Turkeys Are We” running incessantly through our heads; and being paid less than any other educator in the system.
Units
Experiences
What Makes You Laugh? Hurricane’s Coming! Miss Kathie’s Getting Married
February – How Do People and Animals Stay Warm? – weather, hot/cold, seasons, homes, shelters, habitats, talk about winter clothes, play listening games, make cold weather food, hibernation, make up games to play indoors (also celebrate Valentine’s Day with cards for family and friends, talk about love and the mail system) and celebrate Hoodie Hoo Day
Month by Month
learning and it has to be structured carefully as to choice of subject matter, correspondence to program goals, and clarity in documentation. It is the organizational plan of offering the learning to the children.
Literacy Center
with raw materials being greatly superior to Disney Princess gowns and plastic Kim Kardashian high heels! Give the children plain skirts, capes, hats, and pieces of material, feathers, costume jewelry, and community helper outfits that are as plain as possible so they can create from their own imaginations. Foods and food containers, menus from a variety of restaurants, dolls and home stuff goes here and
Learning Centers (LC’s) are the actual locations of the materials children use in learning. Learning Methods (LM’s) are the ways children have of processing and organizing information into learning.
“recess”. Please allow freedom in free play playground time, but it must also be seen as a time of guided and supervised muscle and brain building experiences. Teachers must interact with children here just as in the classroom. Bring blocks and books and balls to the playground. Use other areas of your facility/campus for gross motor experiences too – yards, big indoor areas, and hallways can be used for active learn-while-you-play experiences. There is a great debate currently about the term “recess”. All reputable experts in child development, brain growth, and pediatrics agree that All children under the age of eight MUST have child-chosen free play outdoors when possible, EVERY DAY. This physical freedom of movement, unplanned by curricular aspects, is an absolute necessity for health, learning, and behavior.