My work with Project DIRECT thus far has been incredibly meaningful and fulfilling. Between juggling coursework, lab hours and meetings, thesis writing, and an ongoing graduate school search, Wednesday morning preschool hours are a welcomed treat each week. There’s no better feeling than walking into a classroom and immediately having 25 little faces light up with excitement to see you. This is by no means my first experience working with preschoolers, However, working in the preschool classroom has allowed me to enjoy greater freedom and independence in the classroom than I’ve ever had before. I love being able to participate in classroom activities and work one-on-one with the children as I choose. What’s more, I can’t express enough how warm and welcoming the children and teachers have been at my partner school – the environment is the perfect atmosphere for truly being able to engage in working with children of all abilities, backgrounds, and personalities. My partner school is lucky in a number of ways, one being that there are a plethora of available resources, and another being its diverse student body. The opportunity to work in a classroom where children are all working together towards a similar goal despite ranging from practically illiterate to reading and writing at a 3rd grade level is an extraordinary thing to see, and an even more extraordinary thing to be a part of. I look forward to many more Wednesday mornings at my partner school to come!
My work at preschools has changed greatly since my beginnings in the Baker lab. From cleaning tables to helping out with teacher lessons, Project DIRECT has truly helped to establish comfort in volunteering at preschool environments. This past semester has found me with the goal of executing a service learning project seeking to engage some of the learners that get bored with the pencil and paper method of work. Specifically, my project consisted of me creating a six-sided cube, with small, one-syllable words that kids could practicing rhyming with, printed on each side of the cube. Kids would then be called at carpet time to throw the cube, like a die, and say a word that rhymed with the word the cube landed on. Overall, the kids seemed very receptive to the method of learning, and displayed enthusiasm over rolling the die. Through the die project and thinking on the times I have spent working with Project DIRECT, I appreciate the experiences in preschool classrooms Project DIRECT has brought me.
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Get DIRECTWelcome to the Project DIRECT blog! Here, you'll find updates from the team on our current programs, personal posts from our researchers, and current research in the early childhood field you might find useful. Categories
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April 2023
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