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Kimmel, Sue C.; Carlone, Heidi B. – Science Activities: Classroom Projects and Curriculum Ideas, 2018
Engineering is receiving unprecedented attention in early childhood and elementary classrooms. Teachers of young children may recognize the ways young children act as natural engineers as they design and create with materials from the classroom or playground. Everyday experiences such as choosing the type of bag: paper, plastic, or a reusable…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Young Children, Design, Early Childhood Education
Gan, Ivan – Communication Teacher, 2015
Orators of folk literature and nursery rhymes entertain, inform, and persuade their audiences through the straightforward plots in those genres. Because nursery rhymes recitations usually happen in groups, they help children acquire the mechanics of oral communication and promote communal bonding. Although nursery rhymes have a simpler form than…
Descriptors: Folk Culture, Childrens Literature, Nursery Rhymes, Teaching Methods
Hamilton, Harley – Perspectives for Teachers of the Hearing Impaired, 1987
"Grandfather Moose" rhymes, written to follow the Mother Goose tradition, are short, appealing, easy-to-memorize sign language nursery rhymes which employ visual poetic devices such as similar signs and transitional flow of movement. (CB)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Hearing Impairments, Language Arts, Nursery Rhymes
Lowe, Graham – Primary Science Review, 2006
When carrying out investigative work in the primary school, one often considers how familiar the children are with the context. This usually means considering the practical and life experiences the children have already had. However, it is also valuable to consider the children's literary experiences. Think about all the stories, novels, folk…
Descriptors: Investigations, Fairy Tales, Emergent Literacy, Novels
Neuman, Susan B. – Early Childhood Today, 2005
There has been an explosion of knowledge over the last few years about how children's earliest experiences set the stage for success in learning to read and write. Most experts agree that children who reach kindergarten with certain characteristics--an interest in books, a fondness for conversation, a curiosity about the world--are more likely to…
Descriptors: Reading Readiness, Writing Readiness, School Readiness, Reading Aloud to Others