Quick Summary
- Campus school reopens safely with reduced enrollment
- Children find care and connection, and new ways to learn
- Enriched experience will live on in early childhood education
Teacher Patty Yeung kneels down with a container of ladybugs, and six tiny children encircle her like a hug. She gently lifts the lid, releasing a cloud of ladybugs into the spring garden at the .
THE SCHOOL
The Early Childhood Lab School is operated by the , Department of Human Ecology, in the College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences.
鈥⑩赌⑩赌
Photos and video by Hector Amezcua/College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences
鈥淥pen your palm and let them come to you,鈥 Yeung says as the ladybugs flit amid the lavender and fava beans and the toddlers鈥 outstretched arms.
A year ago, this preschool yard was vacant, closed down along with much of the 嘿嘿视频 campus due to the spread of COVID-19. Last September, a small cohort of educators led by Kelly Twibell, director of the Early Childhood Lab School, found a way to safely open their doors to a few dozen children of essential workers in Davis and Sacramento. In the process, Twibell and have discovered ways to enrich childhood education now and into the future.
鈥淭he lockdown challenged us to reinvent what we do,鈥 says Twibell, smiling as she watches the children play. 鈥淲orking together, we鈥檝e been able to create safe spaces where children can connect with their peers, build relationships with adults, and explore their world.鈥
Seeing beyond the masks
The Early Childhood Lab School is serving 24 children onsite and 30 remotely at the present time. That鈥檚 down significantly from the 84 children the school typically enrolls when some 50 undergraduates and student interns are onboard getting hands-on experience working directly with the kids.
The school follows strict COVID-19 protocols, including frequent hand-washing and mandatory mask-wearing, which makes for an interesting challenge when teaching toddlers how to recognize emotions.
鈥淲e usually talk a lot about reading faces to understand how people are feeling,鈥 Twibell explains. 鈥淣ow with masks, we encourage children to listen and look at each other more closely to pick up clues.鈥
What can you tell by the sound of someone鈥檚 voice? Why are your friends鈥 shoulders slumped? Did you notice that their eyebrows are raised?
鈥淢asks allow us to explore a deeper layer of understanding,鈥 Twibell says. 鈥淲e find ourselves paying closer attention to those around us, which is valuable for all of us as we navigate a post-pandemic world.鈥
Hands-on remote learning
鈥淲ave your scarf up and down, up and down, up and down.鈥 Lecturer Hannah Minter Anderson sings and waves a scarf while a screen full of attentive toddlers sing and wave scarves (and a random sock) along with her.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 right! You got it!鈥 Anderson beams.
When you walk into Anderson鈥檚 remote-learning classroom, you might feel like you鈥檙e on set of the Mister Rogers Neighborhood television show. There鈥檚 the class pet (a stuffed squirrel named Frederico), a wall of colorful artwork and a teacher with a warm, welcoming smile.
The difference is, the children in this online experience are not viewers. They are active participants, stacking blocks or planting seeds or playing rhythm sticks along with Anderson and one another. When one child shares a toy dinosaur with the group, the other children scramble off screen and bring back toys of their own to show and tell.
鈥淭he children end up having conversations with each other, not just with me,鈥 Anderson says. 鈥淭hey send cards to each other and invite each other to their virtual birthday parties. They鈥檙e building lasting friendships, even though they haven鈥檛 yet met in person.鈥
Activity kits are keepers
Each week, Anderson curates a kit of materials and activities 鈥 like paints, seeds and blocks 鈥 that parents bring home so children can play and learn along together with their online classmates. Some weeks they become astronauts, some weeks they pretend to be rock stars, some weeks they are architects building towers to the sky.
鈥淭he kits are so successful that we want to build on them even after we return to fully staffed in-person classrooms,鈥 Twibell says. 鈥淭his type of hands-on remote learning could expand the reach of childhood education into areas where families don鈥檛 have many options for high-quality care. These activity kits can give parents and providers the resources they need.鈥
Keeping connections alive
Outside, the children continue their adventures. Some toddlers gather roly-poly bugs to place in habitats they built inside glass jars. Other children flap their arms like birds. One group stands at the perimeter of the schoolyard, weaving flowers into the fence to make it prettier for them and the outside world.
This fall, if all goes according to plan, 嘿嘿视频 and this lab school could accommodate more in-person learning for preschool children and the undergraduates and student interns who work with them. Twibell welcomes the change and is happy to know that her team and community found a way to help children stay connected throughout the pandemic.
鈥淣ature and children are so incredibly resilient,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he Earth keeps spinning, and we keep going. Sometimes, it鈥檚 the children who lead the way.鈥
Media Resources
Diane Nelson is a senior writer on the communications team in the College of Agricultural and Natural Resources. or phone, 530-752-1969 (office) or 209-345-9496 (cell).