Color them kindergartners
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Jeff Benson
Kindergarten is where the questions begin: Does he want to be my
friend? Does this taste good? How come she gets all the attention?
And why don’t I get to play?
Kindergarten teachers, though, provide some of their first lessons
in lifelong virtue. Sonora Elementary School’s Cheryl Hoyt has been
teaching children for 20 years and stresses the importance of
sharing, getting along and following instructions.
Hoyt’s 20 kindergartners broke out their red, yellow and green
crayons to draw and color traffic signals Monday, but it wasn’t so
much the art lesson itself as much as it was the instruction that
accompanied it. It’s two weeks into the school year, and many of the
children who hadn’t attended preschool have a tough time being told
what to do, she said.
“They’re my little debutantes,” she said. “This is their
introduction to society. They’re used to taking naps or getting to
play whenever they want to. But they’ll go from 4- and 5-year-olds
who cry to being able to read and write and add and subtract by the
end of kindergarten.”
Hoyt turned a simple exercise like drawing and coloring a stop
light into the kids’ first school lessons in drawing lines,
distinguishing shapes and exploring colors.
“We’re going to make a rectangle,” Hoyt said. “How many sides does
a rectangle have? And how many corners? And who remembers what circle
color goes on top?”
The kids were now somewhat used to asking the questions. But when
they had rapid-fire questions shot back at them, they became quiet
and thoughtful. But equally important was that the kids sat quietly
with their hands folded, raised their hands to speak, stood in
straight lines and shared crayons.
“It’s about building friends and learning how to share,” Hoyt
said. “Little things trigger that, like ringing a bell. I want them
to be team players.”
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