The
organization that I have been researching is the National Association for the
Education of Young Children. Their
website is very informative, well organized, and easy to navigate. The section that really stands out to me and that
seems relevant to my current professional development is the section titled “Publications”. Clicking on the publications tab takes you to
a listing of articles related to educating young children. I am currently a preschool teacher working
with 3 and 4 year olds and I found several of their articles to be beneficial
to my current teaching style and lesson planning.
There is an article on the
website entitled “Tender Topics: Using Read-Alouds to Explore Sensitive Issues”. The title of the article made me want to read
more on the topic. I use read-alouds throughout
my lesson plans to help improve listening skills and logic reasoning skills, therefore
this article really stood out to me. I
also encounter situations within my classroom considered “tender topics” that are
difficult to explain to children such as, divorce, child abuse, bullying, and
homelessness. I have several children in
my class that have divorce parents and some of them don’t even know their dads,
and it’s difficult for me to explain to them and the other children why both their
parents are unable to attend “family picnic day” or why some children make
father’s day cards and others don’t.
This article discusses ways in which we can address these tender topics
with our class by using read-alouds and having class discussions.
The National Association for the
Education of Young Children’s website offers insight into how early childhood
professionals can provide quality childcare through training and publications. It’s a wonderful resource to use in gaining
knowledge on the best childcare practices and policies.
Hello Felecia
ReplyDeleteIt is wonderful that you found so many helpful insights that are relevant to your professional development. It's really sad that some children are not able to create fathers day cards because their fathers are not in their life. It is also unfortunate that some children have to deal with certain outcomes that comes along with a divorce. Enjoyed your post.
Latasha
Hi Felecia,
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed your post. Especially the "Tender Topics". It sounds like an excellent article. I'm sure it has served as a great resources to you. I will have to look that up! Thanks for sharing.
Felicia,
ReplyDeleteI also use a variety of storybooks to address those "Tender Topics". I am interested to read the article you spoke of. My program director has a great library of books just for these topics, for which I am grateful! She has books on things such as divorce, death, moving, death of a pet, growing and changing, adoption, and many more. Are there any books that you would recommend to me that I could add to my own classroom library?
Amanda