- 949 Geneva Avenue | Oakdale, MN 55128
- Contact Us
- (651) 714-8646
Parenting Blog
Display All Posts
Search by Topic:
- ADHD (1)
- Babies (9)
- Baby caring (10)
- Baby crying (9)
- Baby Sleep (10)
- Bed time (13)
- Breakfast with Spirit (4)
- Caring for Yourself as a Parent (9)
- Child Care Selection (2)
- Children and Eating (4)
- Children returning home (1)
- Daylight Savings Time (4)
- Dealing with a crisis (5)
- Emotion Coaching (29)
- Establishing Clear Limits (10)
- Evening Routine (4)
- Frustration Coaching (3)
- Fussy baby (9)
- Getting children Outside (1)
- Getting children to help (2)
- Gift giving and receiving (1)
- Giving In (3)
- Helping Children Learn to Share (2)
- Helping Children Listen (7)
- High needs baby (6)
- Holidays (10)
- Mealtimes (6)
- Meltdowns (16)
- Morning Routines (7)
- Mother's Day (2)
- Pacifiers (2)
- Parental Sleep (5)
- Parenting (keeping your cool) (17)
- Parenting during the Pandemic (15)
- Parenting in Uncertain Times (8)
- Parenting Style (4)
- Parenting Styles/Working Together (2)
- Pockets of Predictability in a Hectic Day (14)
- Potty Training (2)
- Power Struggles (19)
- Reducing Stress (16)
- Routine, the secret to a calm day (13)
- School (7)
- Setting Limits for Children (4)
- Sharing (2)
- Six Year Old Development (1)
- Sleep (15)
- Summer (3)
- Talking about Race with Your Children (1)
- Time-out (1)
- Toilet Training (2)
- Traveling with Spirit (3)
- When you must say NO (1)
- Whining (5)
- Words to use in the Heat of the Moment (14)
- Working from Home (2)
Popular Posts:
Is Your Child in a Great Classroom?
In the video that arrived on my Facebook page the other day Big Foot sways to the music, leaps in the air and chuckles in delight. The headline reads, “How parents feel when their kids go back to school.” But sometimes along with the relief of returning to a routine comes the angst of whether or not your child is in a good classroom.
The answer to this question is available to you through your senses.
Listen, Watch and Experience carefully.
It’s the hum of voices that strikes you first in a quality classroom. Children are busy, focused on their projects. No child is an “outsider,” wondering aimlessly about the room. Heads nearly touch as groups of three and four figure out a task. One child offers a suggestion, while another voices disagreement; voices rise for a moment yet no argument breaks out thanks to a teacher keenly tuned in to what is happening in her classroom. With the first note of intensity she nonchalantly steps toward the group. They look toward her confident in the knowledge she’s coming to help them. She asks a few questions, offers hints, exclaims over their discoveries, and listens to their explanations. Her support and guidance allow the children to solve the problem, and celebrate their success with a round of “high fives.”