WELCOME

Key Peninsula Co-op: is a parent participation preschool that provides a quality, developmentally appropriate, learning experience for children ages three to five. Through collaboration among teachers, parents, Bates Technical College and the Peninsula School District, it makes available a stand alone classroom at the Vaughn site and an inclusive classroom at the Evergreen site. To find out more about this unique preschool, please give us a call To Register: 253.884.5535
www.keypeninsulapreschool.org



12.16.2014

Teacher Updates- December 2014

Hello Vaughn Families,
I cannot believe that it is already December!  We have had such a great
beginning to our preschool year.  The children have come together as great
groups in each class and I am seeing friendships being formed.  
During the month of December we will be reading different stories of
The Gingerbread Man.  Our concepts will include Small, Medium and Large.
Our vocabulary words are 2, Red, Gingerbread Man and Excited.
I hope that you can all make it to our annual Gingerbread House Decorating
Potluck on Friday evening from 6:00-7:30...it is always a night of fun and 
excitement.  At the end of the evening, the children will be reading to you
the story of The Gingerbread Man.
Thank you so much for sharing your children with me!
We are having a great year!!!
Teacher Kim
 
 
Hello Evergreen Families, 
 
In our class we have been working on letter recognition of names, counting 
1-5, and colors.  During December we are continuing letter recognition of names, 
and will work on writing our name. We will also read the Gingerbread Man and learn
two new nursery rhymes, Twinkle, Twinkle Little Star and I'm a Little Teapot
We will be starting a lesson calle Mat Man, this is where we learn how to draw people.
 
On Thursday December 18th, during class time, we will be making Gingerbread men
cookies. You are welcome to join your child to make the cookies and play. 
 
Thank you for sharing your child and I hope you have a wonderful holiday season! 
Teacher Mary 


  • Remember winter break is December 22nd through January 2.
  • Remember to collect your box tops to help raise funds for the co-op!

12.15.2014

Thank you to The Gig Harbor Garden Club!



The Gig Harbor Garden Tour Association graciously provided a $3000 grant to the Key Peninsula Cooperative Preschool to purchase state-of-the-art, computer compatible projectors for each class. The projectors allow the teachers to use on-line programs and much more to help further classroom instruction.

Proceeds from the Garden Tour benefit local organizations that promote literacy. Last year, the tour supported the Boys and Girls Club, Communities in Schools of Peninsula (CISP), the Gig Harbor library, Reach out and Read (Pediatrics Northwest) and the Reading is Fundamental program at Evergreen Elementary School.

The Gig Harbor Garden Tour Association is a non-profit 501(c) 3 organization and is an all-volunteer organization.

 Key Peninsula Cooperative Preschool Award Presentation: back row left to right Laurie Dahl Isacson, Janice Reeder, Mary Tyler, Amanda Warfield with children, left to right, Ben, Julia and Mason

12.01.2014

Inclement Weather and School Closures

Luckily, the recent snow that graced us was during a school holiday.  But what if it was on a school day? Here are a few tips to see if school will be in session:

  • We follow school district closures.  Our school district is Peninsula School District 401.
  • If school is two hours late, then we do not have preschool.
  • School Messenger will notify you or listen to the major radio and TV station for school closures and delays.
 

10.14.2014

The Importance of Play

Carol Gulczynski shared this article with us for September's parent ed credit. Along with this article it makes for some wonderful reading about children and play and learning. Enjoy and gain some valuable insight into these amazing little creatures we call our kids!   





8.20.2014

The Countdown Begins!

Hello 2014-2015 Preschool Families!

Saturday September 6th will be here before we know it - less than 3 weeks to go until Paperwork In The Park. Do you have your paperwork printed out?

Here is a link to everything you need!

Now is also a good time to get birth certificates photocopied, and to give your pediatrician a call to ask for immunization records.

I hope everyone is enjoying this gorgeous August!


2.18.2014

'Good Job' Alternatives



Parents and teachers often say 'good job' as an automatic response to a child's action.

"You ate all of your peas. Good job!"
"You did such a good job putting away the toys!"

A 'good job' now and then is fine, but it doesn't help children understand whyhat they did was good. Preschoolers need to know what they did, why it worked, or why it shows they are capable. Try the following suggestions to give preschoolers specific, detailed information that recognizes their achievements and encourages their learning.

1. Use sentence starters. Say "I see you," or "I hear you," or "I noticed you sorted the leaves into two piles. These ones are from an oak tree and those ones are from a maple tree." Or try openers like "Tel me more about" or "You worked really hard to."

2. Notice and give feedback about efforts. "Jocelyn, you spent a long time figuring out where to put the last two pieces of the puzzle. You kept working until you were done!"

3. Invite children to talk. Children's learning is enhanced when they talk about their explorations and creations. "That looks really interesting. How did you do that?" "You wrote a lot of words on your paper. Would you tell me what they say?"

4. Pay attention to details. When talking about a painting, tell the artist what shape, lines, colors, textures, and forms you see in the work. "Look at all of the green polka dots in the sky! You mixed many shades of green and blue to paint this picture."

5. Say "thank you." When children are helpful, thank them. "Thank you for opening the door for me. While you held the door, I could use both hands to carry our bag of balls into the classroom."

6. Identify a goal before responding. Ask yourself: Do I want to acknowledge a positive behavior, an act of kindness, or use of problem-solving skills? To encourage self-regulation you might say, "How kind you are. You helped Jorge zip his coat, even though you wanted to run and play."

7. Give nonverbal feedback. A gentle pat on the back, a smile, a wink, or a fist bump tells a child, "I see you are learning." This is especially appropriate for children who are dual language learners.





8. Use mirroring. When a child goes up and down the slide on her own for the first time, notice her smile, then smile back with a specific comment. "Look at what you did! Just yesterday you asked me to help you and now you can do it on your own."

9. Highlight children's work. Invite children to help find a place to hang a painting. Plan a time when children can share their work with classmates. Include photos that demonstrate children's efforts and accomplishments in a blog or a family newsletter. "Petra and Janine, please help me choose some photos for our weekly update. I'd like all the families to see how you worked together to make a boo about our trip to the nature center."

10. Encourage next steps. After a child has one positive experience, suggest something that he or she can do that leads to another accomplishment. "The boat you drew has two masts and lots of portholes. What materials could you use to build it? (Note the introduction of a new vocabulary word - portholes!) TYC

*Special thanks to Kathy Charner, the Devereux Center or Resilient Children, Linda Gillespie, Mary Mackrain, Sue Mankiw, Ben Mardell, Marie Masterson, Mary Benson McMullen, and Karen N. Nemeth for their contributions.*


Excerpt taken from TEACHING YOUNG CHILDREN Vol.7, No.1
Illustrations by David Clark

1.23.2014

Positive Guidance Tips

Many of you have asked for parenting ideas. . .here are very simple guidelines that are easy to implement!

  • Have REALISTIC EXPECTATIONS!
  • Let children clearly know what they can and can't do (SET LIMITS!).
  • MODEL the behavior you want to see from your children.
  • Give children CHOICES.
  • Talk with your children about their FEELINGS.
  • RE-DIRECT children to things they can do safely.
  • PRAISE children for their good behavior choices.
  • Look for ways to PREVENT misbehavior.
  • Have lots of FUN ACTIVITIES!