toddler house
Ages 18 months to 2.9-3 years
Toddlers are a beautiful blend of curiosity, enthusiasm, love and light. They need a flexible balance of love and support, and opportunities for space and independence. Our Toddler Classroom offers children a first step in extending their world of trusted people into another safe and nurturing environment outside the home. Toddlers awaken to the joy of navigating new relationships and indulge their natural curiosity through new activities and the use of new materials.
The goal of early childhood education should be to activate the child’s own natural desire to learn. – Dr. Maria Montessori
Toddler House Program Overview
Practical Life Skills
A central focus of our classroom is encouraging self-care through the development of practical life skills. Children gain confidence as they master new tasks and enjoy more independence. The classroom is set up to encourage growth in everyday skills, such as removing one’s shoes and outerwear, putting on slippers, setting the table and clearing dishes, and using the toilet. Other examples of practical everyday work skills include scooping, pouring, zippering, snapping, buttoning and sweeping.
Language
Language is an area of huge growth for children in the first three years of life. Among toddlers, there is a wide range of language abilities. In our classroom, children develop language skills through peer interaction, teacher modeling, books, and specific work that facilitates vocabulary growth and conversational interaction.
Sensorial
Our senses help us to navigate the world around us. Young children especially benefit from being introduced to sensorial materials and experiences. Classroom sensorial materials include musical instruments, color paddles, textured blocks (for rough and smooth), beading, and sorting objects by shape or color.
Math
Toddlers are exposed to numbers through counting games and songs and physical materials. Toddler Math activities include counting books, stacking and nesting cubes, number puzzles, and sorting.
Fine and Gross Motor Skills
If Toddlers are awake, they are moving! Whether they are using their gross motor skills to crawl, walk, run, climb, jump, dance, or roll; or, their fine motors skills to paint a picture, zipper a coat, or pick up a small piece of food… Toddlers need to move! In our classroom, Toddlers enjoy a variety or both fine and gross motor activities to meet their needs and release their energy. Fine motor exercises include using tongs to transfer small objects, drawing, beading, flower arranging, pouring and scooping. Gross motor equipment and exercises include: free standing stairs, rocking boat, tunnel, slide, stepping stones, yoga, music and movement, and outdoor play.
Art
In our classroom toddlers enjoy the use of water colors, acrylic, finger paints, colored pencils, markers, play dough, glue, tissue paper and other art materials to explore with and create their own artwork.
Enrichment Programs
The Toddler Program is fortunate to have excellent enrichment teachers in the following content areas:
- Music
- Joppa Flats Nature Presentations
Any child who is self-sufficient, who can tie his shoes, dress or undress himself, reflects in his joy and sense of achievement, the image of human dignity, which derived from a sense of independence. -Maria Montessori
A typical morning program schedule:
- 8:50-9:15 Transition into classroom
- 9:15-9:30 Circle Time
- 9:30-10:00 Work Time
- 10:00-10:20 Activity Room
- 10:20-10:40 Snack
- 10:40-11:00 Music and Movement/Yoga
- 11:00-11:30 Work/Project Time
- 11:30-11:50 Outdoor Play
- 11:50-12:00 Transition Home/Lunch
A typical extended day program schedule:
- 8:50-9:15 Transition into classroom
- 9:15-9:30 Circle Time
- 9:30-10:00 Work Time
- 10:00-10:20 Activity Room
- 10:20-10:40 Snack
- 10:40-11:00 Music and Movement/Yoga
- 11:00-11:30 Work/Project Time
- 11:30-11:50 Outdoor Play
- 12:00-12:30 Lunch
- 12:30-2:30 Nap
- 2:30-3 Snack/Transition Home