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Now in a second edition, this popular resource shows teachers and
childcare providers how to work with young children based on
current neuroscience research. Revised and expanded, it contains a
wealth of practical and specific activities and materials to use
with infants and toddlers to enhance growth and development. For
each activity presented, the text examines its relation to the
rapid brain growth that characterizes the 0 to 3 years, including
major developments in sensory reception, movement, language,
cognition, memory, vision, and motivation. Featured materials, with
guidance for their use and where to find them, include paint,
mark-makers, man-made found objects, natural objects, clay, paper,
and light and shadow. This edition features many full color images
and two new chapters on using electronic technology with infants
and toddlers written by outstanding early educators. This is an
essential guide for trainers and professionals who work with very
young children, as well as parents and other caregivers. Book
Features: The interpretation of current neuroscience as a
supplement to the wisdom of excellent early childhood educators.
Numerous vignettes of teachers at work with young children inspired
by the experiences of lifelong early educator Ann Lewin-Benham. New
ideas regarding the responsible introduction of electronic
technology to young children. Original color photos of children
learning with traditional materials such as paint, clay, and
fabric, as well as with electronic devices such as cameras and
computers. Insights and practices of renowned cognitive
psychologists, including Stanislas Dehaene.
Brings to life the theory of mediated learning. Through numerous
examples and scenarios from classrooms and museums, they show how
mediated learning helps children to become more effective learners.
Readers learn the steps in the process, including analysing the
child's problem, teaching the child to focus on the difficulty, and
using the techniques of mediated learning to enable the child to
overcome the learning challenge.
In ""Possible Schools"", Ann Lewin-Benham showed us that we can
create schools that engage the minds of children and involve
parents, even in urban settings. In this book, she describes
projects in a school that successfully adapted the Reggio Approach
with Head Start-eligible children. She explains how to use the
Reggio Approach to address current major concerns in early
education, including helping children become self-disciplined,
making sure children are ready for 1st grade, assessing children's
progress, and laying a foundation for literacy.Presenting a
multitude of examples of excellent preschool practice, this dynamic
book introduces the concept of ""significant work"" that draws
deeply on young children's innate intelligences, provides teachers
with an opportunity to reflect on what they know and understand
about young children, illustrates how teachers can make changes in
their classrooms to expand and improve learning, describes robust
activities from an urban preschool, including how each project
relates to a particular teaching principle, and suggests more
clearly defined standards and lays out policy implications for
each.
In her new book, popular author Ann Lewin-Benham draws on her
intimate knowledge and experience with the Reggio Approach to
present 12 "best practices" inspired not only by Reggio, but also
by play-based and Montessori approaches to early childhood
education. These practices are demonstrated, one per chapter, with
scenarios from classrooms, dialogues of children and teachers, and
work samples showing the outcome of using each practice. Used
together, the 12 best practices offer a new framework for early
education. Written in the accessible style that her readers
appreciate, this book expands on Lewin-Benham's earlier works by
showing the foundations for teachers to practice the Reggio
Approach in their own settings. It introduces several new
techniques: fostering language skills through Meaningful
Conversation, designing inspiring environments, switching from a
scheduled to an Open Flow day, using materials to build brain
networks and stimulate Significant Work, and much more. This
important resource also includes a self-assessment tool, EXCEL, to
assist you in examining your practices and those of your school.
All chapters include key points and questions to help readers think
more deeply about the material presented.
This book contains a wealth of practical and specific activities
and materials to use with infants and toddlers to enhance growth
and development. Writing in the accessible style that her readers
appreciate, Ann Lewin-Benham looks at current research from the
neurosciences to show what teachers and childcare providers can do
with very young children. For each material or activity presented,
the text examines its relation to the rapid brain growth that
characterizes the zero to three years, including sensory reception,
movement, language, cognition, memory, vision, and motivation.
Materials, with guidance for their use and where to find them,
include: paint, mark-makers, man-made found objects, natural
objects, clay, paper, and light and shadow. This is the definitive
guide for trainers and professionals who work with young children.
In her latest book, bestselling author Ann Lewin-Benham describes
eight techniques that foster intentional and reflective classroom
practice. She presents over 70 novel exercises to help teachers
learn to use body, face, hands, voice, eyes, and word choices to
precisely convey meaning. Some exercises are for teachers to
practice, while others build intention and reflection in children.
Dozens of scenarios from typical classroom situations contrast
unintentional and intentional teaching behaviors. A self-assessment
enables teachers to measure how intentional and reflective they
become as they learn to use the eight techniques. This lively and
often humorous resource is a companion to Lewin-Benham's Twelve
Best Practices for Early Childhood Education, which explains what
to teach and why. This new book explains how to teach.
In her new book, popular author Ann Lewin-Benham draws on her
intimate knowledge and experience with the Reggio Approach to
present 12 "best practices" inspired not only by Reggio, but also
by play-based and Montessori approaches to early childhood
education. These practices are demonstrated, one per chapter, with
scenarios from classrooms, dialogues of children and teachers, and
work samples showing the outcome of using each practice. Used
together, the 12 best practices offer a new framework for early
education. Written in the accessible style that her readers
appreciate, this book expands on Lewin-Benham's earlier works by
showing the foundations for teachers to practice the Reggio
Approach in their own settings. It introduces several new
techniques: fostering language skills through Meaningful
Conversation, designing inspiring environments, switching from a
scheduled to an Open Flow day, using materials to build brain
networks and stimulate Significant Work, and much more. This
important resource also includes a self-assessment tool, EXCEL, to
assist you in examining your practices and those of your school.
All chapters include key points and questions to help readers think
more deeply about the material presented.
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