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Curriculum & PhilosophyMission StatementParents' Nursery School (PNS) is a parent cooperative pre-school that helps children build the fundamental social and emotional skills necessary to become lifelong learners. At PNS learning is developmentally appropriate and meaningful to children's lives. We are committed to supporting families by providing a place where children can safely expand their boundaries from home to the outside world. Children at Parents' Nursery School:
At PNS we trust a child's innate curiosity to be the springboard for learning. Within every activity there are opportunities for problem solving, critical thinking, joy, and humor. Through play and engagement with others, children learn to identify their feelings, advocate for themselves, view problems from multiple perspectives, and resolve conflict. Parents' Nursery School values the development of a diverse community of adults and children. Together, we emphasize learning rather than teaching, and process rather than product. Curriculum and PhilosophyThe program at Parents' Nursery School (PNS) takes a developmental approach to the education of young children, helping them master the basic learning and social skills that form the foundation for all future learning.
When you visit the school, look at it from a child's point of view. Children walk in and see a world of limitless possibility. They look around and begin to wonder, to imagine, to question. The play dough is set out near the sand table -- what happens if we mix sand into the play dough? What if we drape cloths over the indoor climbing structure, and turn it into a tent? What if we spend the whole day -- or the whole week -- outside digging a system of trenches and then filling them with water? (And what if there are five of us and only three shovels? Can we take turns in a way that's fair to everybody? Are there other things we could use to dig with?)
Children change and develop over the course of their two years at PNS. For younger children, the first challenges are generally social -- learning to get along in a group, to speak up and assert one's own needs, to respect others' words and choices,. to gain in independence while knowing that adult support is there if needed. Older children get to experience leadership -- they know the ropes and are often very solicitous of younger kids -- and they tend to explore projects and materials in greater depth.
Overall, the children who go through PNS tend to develop independence, self-reliance, curiosity, and a joyful enthusiasm about school and learning. They learn to respect themselves and others, to make choices, and to solve disputes through negotiation. These, more than any others, are the skills that prepare them for kindergarten and for all the learning that follows. 1999 Addendum
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