...Shows Competence in observing & planning for
literacy and numeracy experiences & environs, adapting to specific learner
needs, interests & contexts
An Ability
Week 8
This week I have been
thinking about how children bring their own ideas, perceptions, attitudes and
ways of thinking to learning experiences and how it is important to plan for
activities that allow for freedom of expression, free exploration, and also extend
on interests. Consequently the educators role depends on being flexible and
guiding learning rather than directing, while also being able to recognise and
respond to the learning and thinking that is being displayed by the children.
Throughout professional experience I have observed that children have a strong
interest in their learning and like to feel in control and involved. Part of
this engagement comes from being able to use their own creativity and
individuality and be able to extend their learning in their own way by expressing
what they have learnt using different mediums (speech, drawing, writing,
remembering), making meaning in social situations and resourcing their own
learning by selecting their own materials.
The skill I have developed and been able to use throughout my practicum
involves supporting learning through the use of teaching and learning
techniques such as, scaffolding, modelling and shared intentionality; while
also selecting learning materials and arranging spaces for engagement, open
ended exploration and making meaning through play. The following pictures are from an
example of a learning experience I developed based on the children’s interests where
children explored colour mixing using milk, food colour and detergent to
produce a reaction that created different shapes and colours:
By allowing for creativity in expression, asking the
children questions to prompt thought processes and structuring the environment
that allowed for free exploration (providing a variety of materials and
allowing the children to find their own ways to use the resources),
opportunities for the children to use their independence and setting up the
activity on a round table to allow for group interaction; I was able to provide
a learning experience that catered for optimum engagement, involvement and
exploration through play.
One of the most important things I learnt from professional
experience is that literacy and numeracy are in everything, whether it be existing
and communicating within social environments, drawing on prior knowledge and
experience, seeing, experiencing and most importantly finding meaning in what
we do, especially in the context of early childhood. Young children are often
already competent in their literacy and numeracy use, they already come with
experience, ideas, perceptions, cultural understandings, formed relationships
and identities, the educator’s role is to therefore extend on specific literacy
and numeracy skills and help the child become a literate and numerate
participant in their world to their greatest ability to be able to be in
control of their thinking, interaction and persona.
A useful website I have found that provides excellent practical, open ended,
playful learning experiences that use resources that can be sourced from around
the home is ‘the Imagination Tree’ - http://theimaginationtree.com,
the examples of activities focus on a birth-4 age group and also provide
examples of how to make, re-use and extend on learning experiences from both
literacy and numeracy perspectives.



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