Keeping everyone going
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Deirdre Newman
Being a first-grade teacher is all about multi-tasking. Kristin
Stephenson at Andersen Elementary School in Newport Beach runs her
classroom like a well-oiled machine. The room percolates with
activity as the students take turns at various project centers.
In one part of the room, students are busy finishing up an art
project. In another corner, the first-graders cozily lie on the floor
and read. And in another nook, students are seated around a table
learning about time.
Parent volunteers help the operation run smoothly by working with
groups of children.
“What we try to do is use parent helpers and have tasks that the
kids have practiced so they know what to do,” Stephenson said. “We
only do things they can do independently. They’re child-centered
groups.”
On a recent Friday morning, one group of youngsters was finishing
up a spooky Halloween project -- painting bats carved out of midnight
black wood.
“I think bats are scary,” said McKay Murtaugh, 7. “I’m going to
put it up on the front door.”
At the same time, in the reading area, Stephenson was reading with
a group of five students. Many of them were sprawled out on the floor
but one sat on a giant couch in the reading area. They read a short
book out loud together.
Meanwhile, parent Allyson Brooks was seated at a circular table
with a group of students with miniature clocks teaching them the
valuable lesson of telling time.
“I love seeing kids in their workplace, getting to know their
friends and keeping up with my own skills,” Brooks said. “I learn
something new every day.”
The children’s ability to maneuver effortlessly around the room is
a testament to the relaxed environment Stephenson has created in her
classroom.
“As a parent, I really want kids to feel comfortable,” Stephenson
said. “The comfort level is really important for first-graders
because reading and writing [at this age] is really hard.”
Stephenson said the movement generated by the various centers
provides important transition time for her students to refocus.
One of Stephenson’s students said she enjoys the opportunity to do
so many different projects.
“I like the teacher because she lets us do lots of fun stuff and
we get to learn a lot,” said Allison Gordon, 6.
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot
education writer Deirdre Newman visits a campus in the Newport-Mesa
area and writes about her experience.
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