The role of the environment-as-teacher
• Within the Reggio Emilia schools, the educators are very concerned about what their school environments teach children. Hence, a great attention is given to the look and feel of the classroom. It is often referring to the environment as the "third teacher"
• The aesthetic beauty within the schools is seen as an important part of respecting the child and their learning environment
• A classroom atmosphere of playfulness and joy pervades
• Teachers organize environments rich in possibilities and provocations that invite the children to undertake extended exploration and problem solving, often in small groups, where cooperation and disputation mingle pleasurably.
• Documentation of children's work, plants, and collections that children have made from former outings are displayed both at the children's and adult's eye level.
• Common space available to all children in the school includes dramatic play areas and work tables for children from different classrooms to come together.
Children's multiple symbolic languages
• Using the arts as a symbolic language through which to express their understandings in their project work
• Consistent with Dr. Howard Gardner's notion of schooling for multiple intelligences, the Reggio approach calls for the integration of the graphic arts as tools for cognitive, linguistic, and social development.
• Presentation of concepts and hypotheses in multiple forms such as print, art, construction, drama, music, puppetry, and shadow play. These are viewed as essential to children's understanding of experience.
Documentation as assessment and advocacy
(Rather unique in Reggio approach)
• Documenting and displaying the children's project work, which is necessary for children to express, revisit, and construct and reconstruct their feelings, ideas and understandings.
• Similar to the portfolio approach, documentation of children's work in progress is viewed as an important tool in the learning process for children, teachers, and parents.
• Pictures of children engaged in experiences, their words as they discuss what they are doing, feeling and thinking, and the children's interpretation of experience through the visual media are displayed as a graphic presentation of the dynamics of learning.
• Teachers act as recorders (documenters) for the children, helping them trace and revisit their words and actions and thereby making the learning visible.
Long-term projects
• Supporting and enriching children's learning through in-depth, short-term (one week) and long-term (throughout the school year) project work, in which responding, recording, playing, exploring, hypothesis building and testing, and provoking occurs.
• Projects are child-centered, following their interest, returning again and again to add new insights.
• Throughout a project, teachers help children make decisions about the direction of study, the ways in which the group will research the topic, the representational medium that will demonstrate and showcase the topic.
The teacher as researcher
• The teacher's role within the Reggio Emilia approach is complex. Working as co-teachers, the role of the teacher is first and foremost to be that of a learner alongside the children. The teacher is a teacher-researcher, a resource and guide as she/he lends expertise to children.
• Within such a teacher-researcher role, educators carefully listen, observe, and document children's work and the growth of community in their classroom and are to provoke and stimulate thinking
• Teachers are committed to reflection about their own teaching and learning.
• Classroom teachers working in pairs and collaboration, sharing information and mentoring between personnel.
Home-school relationships
• Children, teachers, parents and community are interactive and work together. Building a community of inquiry between adults and children.
• For communication and interaction can deepen children's inquiry and theory building about the world around them
• Programs in Reggio are family centered. Loris's vision of an "education based on relationships" focuses on each child in relation to others and seeks to activate and support children's reciprocal relationships with other children, family, teachers, society, and the environment.
What makes the Reggio Emilia approach stand out?
In a nutshell, the Reggio approach articulates children to acquire skills of critical thinking and collaboration.
(Information on the Reggio Emilia Approach from www.brainy-child.com)
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7 comments:
I am excited for this Fall. I have seen lots of small steps towards change in the classrooms-softening the look form plastic to mare natural fibers, and many displays in and out of the classroom of child directed work. Small steps lead to beg accomplishments. I too have made changes in my own classroom and enjoy the atmosphere. Peggy Rick
Now if there was spell check, I would have a better comment. Once again, more natural fibers in the classrooms, small steps to big accomplishments. Peggy
I continue to ponder what this means for parents. Asking about their hopes and dreams and posting them in the parent room...is perhaps a start.
I LOVE the idea of the classroom as the 3rd teacher! The kids spend so much time here at school and we want them to feel as comfortable in their environment as they can. We always have the kids help us think of ways to rearrange the room and have them do a lot of the moving so they feel more a part of the changes. It's amazing to us when we have an area that isn't being used and we move it to a different location and kids start using it again!
We (Sarah, Chad, and Beth) all agree that the playfulness and joy among the kids often begins with playfulness and joy among the teachers! When we're having fun, the kids pick up on that and the whole atmosphere in the room changes. Again, it goes back to the many hours these kids are here (and WE are here)...why not have them (and US) in a fun, loving place where we ALL want to be!
Being a teacher-researcher and learning along with the kids is a wonderful part of the Reggio classroom and makes learning fun for us as well as the kids. The kids get a kick out of asking us questions and having us say, "I don't know! Let's find out!" and off to the computer we all go!
The more Reggio things we do in our classroom, the more we WANT to do! It's just very difficult to find the time to do everthing we want to do.
To support the "3rd Teacher" we have been trying to take more photos while the kids are interacting and hang them in our classroom. We have also heard the kids whispering to each other to help make something together so the teachers will take our picture. We have been sending them to parents via email, but we have found it challenging to print out pics to hang in our class due to cost of paper/ink for the dock printer. We are trying to figure out alternatives for printing.
The parents have been making many positive comments about the documentation and photos we have been adding to the classrooms! We are now asking ourselves much more about why we do activities and projects and what the children are learning and gaining from each. The children are helping us to be more creative and to learn along with them. We were feeling challenged this week when the children voted to learn about unicorns-but together we are exploring and growing with these challenges.
Any comments or suggestions for the wonders being posted here?
Deb, you can print to the laser printer in the main office rather than to the docking printer. Much faster and great colors. If you need help, I believe Chad could be a good resource to show you how to do it.
Mary O'
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