Friday, January 25, 2013

Worth 1,000 Words

I really love a photo. I good photo captures memory and emotion, stories and ideas in just 1/250th of a second. That is a powerful 1/250th of a second! Of course, we have all heard the saying "a picture is worth a thousand words", but then there is this picture of Bamborough, which is worth three-thousand at least. There has been oh-so so much going on across our two campuses, and I wish I could transport you there- but that's what I have a camera.

The Bumblebees and Butterflies held a spirit week. Each day offered a new theme. On "favorite book character day", Bamborough dressed like Pippy Longstockings, which seemed to fit her to a tee.
What's bigger then a Birthday? The Grasshoppers celebrated the big oh-three with popsicles and family full of giggles.


 The Leaping Lizards find their inner zen with Erin, a long time TLS teacher, turned yoga instructor. She is bringing the practice to even our little guys, incorporating songs, calming breaths (hello Conscious Discipline!) traditional poses, and lots of improv. I am consistently amazed at how Erin can turn "Twinkle little star" into a yoga pose.

March madness has come early to The Little School at Duke. Lauren and Norman find the sun and some serious basketball moves!


Raining days call for legos! A amazing brain booster, legos access fine motor, imagination, problem solving, concentration, and the list goes on. Plus, you can build the sweetest space ships with them.

Rainy days also call for lots of ways to get your wiggles out. This Sunny Sparrow took advantage of TLS Duke's gross motor room, where they can wiggle to their hearts content. With a room full of friends cheering her on, Elodie discovered the joy of tunnels!
SNOW! There is little better then a day playing with your friends in the snow. Elsie is using all her senses to explore the rarest of beast: NC snow


Eliza delights in her teachers effort to clear the snow.

The snow is melting, but the party keep coming. Our Hummingbird friends had snow in the morning, but now awake to find their playground filled with wonderful puddles. With bucket at the ready, Shiwoo stirs, pokes, sploshes and investigates the melted snow from all angles.
The snow may be melting into puddles, but in the Bears class, the sensory table fills up with the coolest gooey/smooth "snow", you can't help but to squish and squish.
Our Lizards have been studying the body through song, dance and these amazing cuts outs. Surprisingly, these usually squiggly toddlers laid perfectly still for their tracing, anxious to see the results.


Like the 2 year olds, our Pre-K explorers also traced their bodies. After carefully adding their details (Andy here has depicted her "party socks") they measured and counted their bodies in all directions using unifix cubes.
Inspired by the book Not a Box The Toddling Turtles investigated containers of all kinds. Big, small, soft, hard, transparent, opaque, and even twinkly. Leading with the question "what can you DO with this?" all week the kids filled and dumped, were inside, on-top of and all around the boxes. The boxes became places to read, and musical instruments, beds for babies dolls and untold worlds to explore!
The Fliers studied the death of their hermit crabs. It's a big topic that these 4 year old have lot of their own ideas about. Like all topics at TLS, the Fliers allowed their kids to lead the learning.
The Little Rainforest class have been investigating igloos from all angles. The diagrams they created above will help them create a large life sized model out of plastic milk jugs.

My Explorer friends proudly offer very mixed directives to this photographer.

The Diving Dolphins have been diving into an investigation of eggs. The kids have been conducting egg-y experiments, reading books upon books, creating art projects and learning all there is to know about eggs and what lays beneath. Spencer is painting (pre-writing fine motor) his dinosaur egg.
Brrr, with the arctic blast come the march of the penguins in the Yellow Duck room. Our three year old friends are learning all about the lives of these waddling birds.





Friday, January 18, 2013

Let me tell you about my friend Monica


If you are a TLS Hillsborough parent, you may already know Monica as a wonderful warm and engaged teacher (indeed, she was a teacher to my infant daughter, so I am completely biased to her wonderfulness). Our Hillsborough staff know her as a mentor, a motivated team member and a loyal friend. Now our Duke families are coming to know her as their new Program Director/Wonder Woman. She is a Mother, a Morehead scholar, a world traveler and a passionate voice for high quality early childhood education. What many may not know about Monica is that she has been cheering us on from behind the scenes for many years. Monica first became acquainted with TLS when she was the Manager of Staff and Family programs at Duke, which included oversight of all of the childcare benefits and services for 34,000 employees. Believing strongly in the vision and talent at TLS, Monica advocated to allow local providers to bid on the the project that ultimately become The Little School at Duke. She is a big brainy genius, and also really fun to share a cup of tea with.

When she heard of the tumult in leadership this past December, she took her friend hat off and asked “How can I be of service”. Having such love for The Little School, Duke and this project, she had a strong pull to do whatever she could to make it a success. It was so natural, so effortless, so easy-peasy that it felt truly meant to be. Initially she was here in a interim role, but once her feet were on the ground she knew that there was only one choice to make: as she announced in our last parent/staff meeting, she in in it for the long haul and plans on being with us for years to come. Her focus is to be here for the teachers inside and out, to create a professional and positive work environment that makes them excited and proud of their visionary field. We count ourselves extremely fortunate to have her.

I could go on and on about my pal Monica, but I will allow her to introduce herself.

* How did you find your way to TLS?   
I got to know The Little School back in 2005, when I was the Manager of Staff and Family Programs at Duke.  I visited the various high quality child care centers who were members of the Duke Child Care Partnership and The Little School in Hillsborough (back when it truly was a little school) was one of those schools.  The quality of the curriculum and the school’s commitment to including children with special needs in their program made an impression.  I became a fan and have been one ever since.

* What do you value most or hold most dear at TLS?  
The commitment to the Reggio Emilia philosophy permeates everything we do and continues to help me grow personally and professionally on a daily basis.  Its fundamental belief that we are all of equal value – children, teachers, management – is one which I hold.  It also means that my style of management needs to be one which seeks inclusion and consensus rather than relying on hierarchy and position power.

* What was the most interesting trip you have taken?  
I have taken LOTS of trips in my life so this is a tough one.  I have travelled around the world four times, and have spent a substantial amount of time in over 60 countries.  I think the most interesting spectacle I ever witnessed was in India.  I met the man I ended up marrying on the Delhi-Varanasi overnight express.  We arrived in Varanasi at 4:00 a.m. and went down to the river to take a sunrise boat trip down the Ganges.  When we were on the river we saw literally millions of people flooding into the town; all congregating on the ghats and bathing in the sacred river.  People were chanting, sadhus were standing in gravity-defying yogic positions, funeral pyres were all aglow as this was seen as such an auspicious time to leave this lifetime for the next.  We then asked the old man who was rowing our boat past flower garlands, bloated dead cows and floating lit candles what was happening.  He informed us that Kumbh Mela was starting on that day.  This only occurs once every twelve years in Varanasi and we had never even heard of it and weren’t expecting anything out of the usual Indian assault on the senses.  I had never, and have never since, had such a powerful experience of life – millions of people acting in concert because of their shared belief in things beyond this realm – truly awe-inspiring.

*If you could trade places with any other person for a week, famous or not famous, living or dead, real or fictional. with whom would it be?  
Steven Hawking or someone of that ilk.  I am fascinated by the quantum field and concepts like the time space continuum but my brain isn’t able to conceive of things spatially in a way that allows me to fully understand some of the most cutting edge concepts.  I understand the philosophical implications of their theories, but am missing a big piece in the middle – I would need a different brain to be able to fill in the blanks.

* If you could offer a newborn child only one piece of advice, what would it be?
Not to take it all too seriously, the lighter we can be about life the more we can take on because it doesn’t seem so burdensome.  I think The Little School’s motto, “Nothing Without Joy” is speaking to this.

* What was your strangest job?  
I was a nanny to mobsters in Athens, Greece on my first solo trip around the world.  I was placed in the job by a reputable agency, once I discovered the underbelly of the family, I booked my ticket to continue on – but it was a truly fascinating interlude.

* Would you rather be a worried genius or a joyful simpleton?  
A genius, any day of the week.  My mental life is so much a part of who I am I can’t imagine living without the ability to perceive millions of realities and continue to be curious about life.

* What is your happiest childhood memory/what makes it so special?
My happiest childhood memory also happens to be my earliest – probably no coincidence.  I was out on our patio with my whole family and some of my parents’ friends who had a newborn baby.  I was only two and a half years old and they let me hold the baby.  I was so awe-inspired and felt so important and valuable to be holding this tiny new life.  I dreamt about it for years and as an adult recounted the dream/memory to my parents who were stunned that I remembered it.  They confirmed that it really was a memory from my second year of life.

* What would you listen to if you could only listen to one song for the rest of your life?  
Imagine by John Lennon, but I’m sure it would start to ring hollow after about the hundred thousandth time…..

* What words do you live by?  
There is a quote from a German ecologist, Rudolph Bahro, that I just love.  “When the forms of an old culture are dying, the new culture is created by those people who are not afraid to be insecure.”  I think it speaks to the times we are living in and my personal belief that we are in a time of great transition to a more sustainable, connected, and humane way of inhabiting this planet.  I am still cultivating my fearlessness in the face of uncertainty, and hope to be able to keep stepping out and moving forward in co-creating realities worth inhabiting.  The Little School is certainly a reality worth inhabiting and I am thrilled to be here.