Skip to main content
 

Report from the NAEYC 2011 national conference

By Peggy Ashbrook

Posted on 2011-11-23

Being away from my daily routine is both exciting and a little anxiety-producing, as in Look at all the other early childhood educators who are attending a session on science! and Did I remember to ask someone to feed the fish? Here are descriptions of a few of the sessions I attended at the 2011 NAEYC national conference.
Teachers design a model playground using a bag of sand as the base.The first session (8am!) got me in the swing of early childhood learning. Jill and Adam Bienenstock made a roomful of people feel as though we were outside as we photo-toured many playgrounds and play areas, and were introduced to features such as Wacky Posts, and ideas, such as, shrubs can be better than trees in maintaining close to the goal of 50% shade coverage because their shadows stay on the play area. Then each table got to find out how difficult it is to design a playground that meets most of children’s needs (and the designers’ requirements)—and how satisfying! We imagined ourselves working hard to climb a boulder, feeling the wind in our face as we went down the slide, and as teachers, being able to see and count all the children, even those behind a shrub (because the lower trunks are bare, we can see their legs). I will never look at playgrounds in the same way!
Adam Bienenstock makes a "Bird Seed Ball" as a way to plant food plants for birds.Jill Bienenstock teachs us how to make a headband using contact paper and found natural materials.
 
 
 
Jill and Adam know how to be playful while learning about the natural world through direct contact with it.
The NAEYC Early Childhood Science Interest Forum discussion at the first meeting.I especially looked forward to the conference because this was the first time  the NAEYC Early Childhood Science Interest Forum (ECSIF) would  hold an official meeting! (I sometimes think of my work as being in two worlds, the world of early childhood education and the science-teaching world, and it is so satisfying when they overlap.) The Early Childhood Science Interest Forum provides an opportunity  for early childhood educators, both experienced teachers and those new to the field, to network with others about teaching science, explore what is appropriate  content, discuss what young children are capable of doing and learning, exchange effective strategies and materials, and learn about resources for boosting  inquiry-based science in early childhood. Join the ECSIF, and help fuel a national dialogue around early childhood science  teaching and learning! Find the ECSIF on the NAEYC Interest Forum page, Facebook or email the facilitators at naeyc.ecsif@gmail.com
Presenting a workshop session with Science & Children editor Linda Froschauer to a  roomful of early childhood educators was delightful! My Early Years columns benefit from her expertise (in addition to the work of editors Valynda Mayes and Stephanie Anderson) and her knowledgeable instruction anchored our workshop. And the participants worked  so hard! When teachers participate in science inquiry we understand more fully how  to engage young children. (Read Debra Shapiro’s account of a workshop at a National Science Teachers Association conference where participants explored a motion-and-force activity.) Thank you for doing science with me.
Vivian Gussin Paley speaks at the NAEYC conference and involves the audience in storytelling.Something about hearing a speaker in person makes their words connect more immediately  with my own experiences. Vivian Gussin Paley invited NAEYC participants to tell stories with her, and we did, even in a huge hall. You can learn more about this honored educator’s work by reading interviews with her at http://www.naeyc.org/content/conversation-vivian-gussin-paley and http://illinoisearlylearning.org/interviews/paley.htm
Oh why didn’t I take notes at Sylvia Chard and Yvonne Kogan’s presentation “Implementing the project approach: Changes in teaching, children’s work, and classroom displays”? They narrated a slide show of teachers’ and children’s work before and after implementing the Project Approach which revealed the ways classes can use a variety of media to investigate the  world and develop understanding through in-depth project work. And now I wish I had written down those inspirational words! You can read some of Chard’s and Kogan’s work in an introduction to their book of photography, From my side: Being a child.
Chinese early childhood educators discussed the need for science education in early childhood.At lunchtime I met with people at the Early Childhood Science Interest Forum table in the Interest Forum Café. The conversations I shared with educators from Florida, Turkey and China were about how science inquiry supports other curriculum areas and develops children’s problem-solving skills. How far did you have to travel to participate in this enriching conference?
Educators learn about invertebrates by looking at, and becoming comfortable with, these small animals.Bess bugs are easy to care for in the classroom and safe to handle.The American Museum of Natural History presentation brought educators together with invertebrates—small animals such as caterpillars,  pillbugs, and Bess beetles. Again, our experience will help us guide our students. Look online for their resource, Life in the Leaf Litter by E.A. Johnson and K.M. Catley.
Thinking BIG Learning BIG author Marie Faust Evitt leads a workshop in an integrated curriculum.Early childhood teachers make the best astronauts! “Teacher Marie” (Faust Evitt) spoke on how interesting investigations meet teachers’ urgent need to move children from unproductive behavior to involved learning. Take a look at the work of her students and try these activities in your program.
 
Author and kindergarten teacher Kassia Wedekind shares her Math Exchanges concepts.Kindergarten teacher and author of Math Exchanges Kassia Wedekind shared math activities that are contextually meaningful and mathematically significant. She said the key characteristics of these mathematical conversations are that they are: 1) short, focused sessions that bring all mathematical minds together, 2) responsive to the needs of the specific group of mathematicians, and 3) designed for meaningful, guided reflection.
Even if you did not attend the conference, for a little longer you can download the handouts that presenters posted by going to the NAEYC website at www.naeyc.org, go to “Conferences” and select “Annual conference and Expo”, and then click on the “Session Handouts” button on the top menu bar to go to http://precis.preciscentral.com/utils/ip/FindPresentation.asp?EventID=9431c87f&Presenter=True&bhcp=1
Search the sessions for whatever interests you, click on the presentation title to make another small screen pop up, and scroll down on that screen to see any handouts that were uploaded by the presenters. Test it out by searching for “ashbrook,” or “evitt,” for example, and download my lesson plan for using our sense of smell, and Marie Faust Evitt’s resources.
One must eat and luckily the first restaurant I went to had many appealing dishes that proved delicious. I passed up the Ice Bar, the WonderWorks science-themed indoor amusement park, and Disney, but had great fun talking with teachers and others. Have you been to a conference? Check the NAEYC conference page to see where the next one will be and make a plan of how you can attend next time.
Let me know what the conference did for you,
Peggy

Asset 2