Thursday, 26 July 2012

Professional Development Day - 20th October 2012


Children Creativity & Outdoor Learning

A Professional Development Day focussing on the work of Reflections Nursery, with reference to the Reggio Emilia Approach.

Date: Saturday 20th October 2012, from 10.00am until 3.30pm
Venue: Reflections Nursery, Worthing
Cost:  £60 (Full-time Students £30) including refreshments & lunch 

What is creativity and what is its significance for young children? How can we best support creativity in children? What is the role of the outdoors in supporting creativity?

Martin Pace, Director of Reflections, along with Angela Chick, Senior Atelierista and Yvonne Barr, Nursery Manager will be supported by other Reflections educators to give presentations and workshops drawing on six years of children’s learning at Reflections Nursery, Worthing and the Reggio Approach.

Participants:
We welcome registrations from all those working in the area of early childhood education and on creative arts/education projects with young children. 

Programme:
- Registration at Reflections Nursery, Worthing
- A guided tour of the nursery with a Reflections’ educator
- Presentation, ‘Children, Creativity and Outdoor Learning – the work of Reflections Nursery and inspiration from the Reggio Approach’ - Martin Pace & senior educators
- Lunch
- Concurrent Workshops to choose from:
Workshop 1:  Children learning in the outdoors – Martin Pace
Workshop 2:  The Atelier supporting children’s creativity – Angela Chick & Yvonne Barr
-  Free time to walk around Reflections Nursery

Please contact susan@reflectionsnurseries.co.uk  for further details.

Friday, 13 July 2012

Dead Beetle Sketch


Dead Beetle: Atelier Discussion: 12th July 2012

Anna (3yrs 6 mths); Leo (3yrs 10 mths); Jem (4yrs 0 mths); Evie R. (4yrs 1mth); Esther (4yrs 4 mths); Lewis (3yrs 4 mths); Thomas (4yrs 5mths)

The Thursday Forest School group were leaving for the woodland and noticed a dead stag beetle on the stairs leading to the minibus. Leo and Jem believed this was a cockroach that had escaped from the Atelier (we have Madagascan Giant Hissing Cockroaches in our Atelier). On their return from Forest School, Leo came into the Atelier and told Angela he saw one of the cockroaches that escaped. He looked in to the cockroach tank to see if it had returned.  Leo saw some of the cockroaches sleeping and asked, “Are they dead?”

“There’s one that’s dead that is a baby one. It’s so small and dead but it’s not bone yet” Anna

“Where’s it gone?” Leo

“It’s gone somewhere different.” Anna

“Goes somewhere else.” Jem

“Maybe someone carries it away?” Anna

“If we give the cockroach over there which is dead some water then it might come back again” Evie R. (Referring to the dead stag beetle in a petri dish in the display case)

“When you die you never come back and you will cry because you will never never never never never never never never never never never see your mummy.” Esther

We get the tools to experiment with water and the dead stag beetle which had been in the display case.

“It will take 13 drops!” Evie R.

We count together.

“It won’t come back to life.” Jem

“When the cockroaches are dead, we can put water on them and it moves them back to life.” Esther

“He might float, won’t he?” Jem

“He won’t float or fly, he’ll go up in the sky.” Esther

“It is hard, why is he hard?” Anna

“Because we put water on it, he’s gone all coldy and shrivelled up” Evie R.

“He’s moving! He’s moving!” The children shout as the water pours in and the beetle spins around.

“No, he’s floating!” Jem

“He’s walking!” Evie R.

“He’s not alive…” Lewis (getting upset)

“When he’s alive he might be a cockroach” Evie R.

“He’s got dead legs” Evie L.

“He’s not going to fly ever again” Anna frowns and looks down at the table

“He’s going to get really big and fat with all that water” Anna

“We should leave it and wait” Evie R.

“How long is it going to take?” Jem

Thomas joins the group “Is it the beetle that we saw when we went to Forest School?  Is he dead because he doesn’t like the rain?” Thomas

The beetle is now in a jar in water on the shelf in the Atelier. We will be checking regularly for any changes...

Tuesday, 10 July 2012

A Brief Conversation About Extinction


Documented in our Pre-school Atelier by Angela Chick, Atelierista at Reflections Nursery, Worthing on 10th July 2012

Anna (3yrs 6 mths); Ewan (4yrs 10 mths); Henry (4yrs 0 mths)

Anna: I saw a dinosaur in the museum.

Ewan: It wasn’t a real dinosaur… it was a skeleton.

Anna: It was a skeleton with skin!

Ewan: It’s not a skeleton if it has skin.

Anna: But I saw it!

Ewan: It wasn’t a real one because they’re extinct.

Anna: I saw it before they were extinct!

Ewan: No… because dinosaurs haven’t been here since when we were created by science!

Anna: What science?

Ewan: There was something called the Big Bang. The dinosaurs were here before the Big Bang, now they’re extinct.

Anna: No! I saw them before they were extinct. I saw them moving and I know it was real because it ate a fish!

Ewan: Maybe it just spat it out. They’ve been extinct a really long time. They’re not even alive!

Anna: But I saw them before they were extinct!

Ewan: No, ask your mummy and she will tell you that they’re extinct.

Anna: They’re real life, see? Look at this book!

Ewan: That’s just a picture! They’re not real ones.

Anna: This shows the clock when the dinosaurs were extincting…

Henry: They don’t stink!

Ewan: When we say extinct, it’s ex… tinct, not ‘stink’.

Anna: They weren’t extinct when I went, I saw the real one! Like this!

Ewan: No, I told you, that’s a picture – see?

Anna: OK, this is a picture, someone did draw it.

Ewan: Maybe a grown-up did.