As I’m getting my room ready for the first days of school,
my first thought is, “How will the children feel when they enter my classroom?”
Starting school is a mix of emotions for children and their
adults. Excitement and anticipation, and also anxiety and fear of the unknown.
For children attending preschool for the first time, separation from their
familiar caregiver and learning to trust a new adult to take care of them is
often the only thing on the child’s (and parent’s) mind. For children who have been
to school before, walking in the door of the new classroom is still a
separation. They may do this better than they did the first time, but the
newness of a different classroom, different teachers, and once again saying
goodbye to their parents and caregivers after having some days, weeks, or even
months at home brings up all the feelings of uncomfortable newness and anxiety
that they experienced on their very first day of school.
Knowing that this is what’s going through their heads, my
goal is to make my classroom as welcoming, comforting, familiar, and easy to be
in as possible.
When children walk in the door, I want them to see a space
that says, “Welcome, I’m ready for you”. I want them to see interesting
things that invite them to touch, play, and explore. If I know what a child’s
favorite toy or book is, that toy or book is going to be in the classroom on
the first day. If I don’t, I’ll choose a variety of toys and books that over
the years, have been common favorites: playdough, water or sand, paint, blocks,
and cars, “The Very Hungry Caterpillar” and “Brown Bear Brown Bear What Do You
See.” I’ll have multiples of popular toys, because the goal of these first days
isn’t waiting, taking turns, or forcing sharing with strangers. The goal is
creating an environment that tells the child, “I am here for you. I will take
care of you and give you what you need.” Sharing and taking turns can come
later. Building the connection and trust that I will take care of you comes
first.
In those early days, especially with toddlers or children at
school for the first time, the toys, books, and songs in my classroom focus on
separation and the feelings that come with being at school. We’ll read about
saying goodbye, about your grown-up coming back, about what it feels like to be
at school for the first time. The toys in the room lend themselves to children
acting out their emotions about separation, whether it’s pushing a car through
a tunnel and watching it come back, or hiding an animal in a box and being able
to control when that animals comes back out again. We have a predictable
routine, with frequent reminders of what will happen next, and when their
grown-ups will come back to get them. And most of all, I am there as a warm,
safe, presence for the children. My job is to teach them that they can trust me
to take care of them after their grown-ups leave, and that I can – and will –
meet their needs.
Some teachers start the year will a list of expectations and
procedures that they want children to get used to from the beginning. In those
classrooms, the first days are endless lists of reminders, rules and
procedures. Telling children what you expect them to do doesn’t build
connection. But, once that connection is built – once they trust you and know
that you will take care of them – then,
they’re much more likely to follow the rules and expectations that you present
to them. The reason I don’t emphasize rules in the first days of school isn’t
because there will never be rules, it’s that at that point in time, rules
aren’t what’s most important. What’s important is building relationships,
establishing trust and positive connections, and creating an environment where
children will follow expectations because they want to, not because their told
to. Creating the place that welcomes children comes first. The rest can come
later.
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