Developmentally Appropriate Curriculum in Action, 1st edition

Published by Pearson (April 29, 2013) © 2014

  • Marjorie J. Kostelnik University of Nebraska, Lincoln
  • Michelle L. Rupiper
  • Anne K. Soderman Michigan State University
  • Alice P. Whiren Michigan State University

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  • Gain knowledge about developmentally appropriate curriculum, a curriculum that is whole child, integrated, play-based, and intentional. The entire text  promotes a domain-oriented (aesthetics, affective, cognitive, language, social, physical) play-based curriculum by focusing on helping children learn content, skills and processes associated with successful learning, with national standards that are clearly referenced throughout.
  • Understand how to apply the best techniques for teaching. With a keen focus on methods, Chapters 3 through 16 focus on teaching in all portions of the program including individual, small group and large group teaching; in all areas of the curriculum; the assessment of learning; child guidance; and using projects and themes to enhance the teaching and learning experience. Readers will learn about all portions of the early childhood day—from pre-planning through the daily routine with post-session reflections.
  • Discover examples of children’s work that will prepare you to assess development and progress. Each chapter opens with an authentic student artifact that will help readers recognize the wide array of work by students, the type that teachers collect throughout the year to assess the level of learning of each child in their classroom.
  • Be encouraged to pause and reflect periodically throughout the text. Readers will be presented with a Try This Yourself feature, an exercise embedded in every chapter that encourages critical reflection on what is being learned and immediate application of the concept based on personal experience.
  • Learn about how teachers can use technology to support learning in early childhood. Tech Tips are explicit examples of integrating technology into each area of the curriculum. Find this technology feature in Chapters 9 through 15 (all of the curriculum chapters).
  • Become familiar with the correct vocabulary and effective messaging/communication for explaining chapter-related content to family members and other stakeholders. Whether by creating a newsletter, bulletin board, writing a blog, web site, or a social media outlet, the Newsletter/Web-Ready feature in all chapters will prepare students with models of the actual words they might use to explain what they are teaching and what children are learning.
  • Inform yourself of the range of special needs and diverse children and families you will encounter as a teacher of young children. All chapters incorporate children with special needs with specific examples and unique profiles.
  • Understand the factual knowledge associated with curriculum with sample content associated with each area of the curriculum. In chapters 9-15 (all curriculum chapters) there are a plethora of curriculum examples with specific terms and facts that young children need to learn and early childhood teachers need to incorporate into their teaching. This strengthens students’ knowledge of Standard 5, Using Content Knowledge to Build Meaningful Curriculum, in the NAEYC Early Childhood Standards for Professional Preparation Programs.
  • Relate new knowledge to classroom experience. All chapters include the closing assessment section, Applying What You Learned, offering specific exercises and assignments that enable students to apply chapter knowledge with children in early childhood classrooms.
  • Get clear ideas about specific materials and common objects that can be used to teach within each curricular domain. Sample materials and resources are listed for each of the curriculum areas within Chapters 9-15, and in the Appendices.
  • Gain access to age-related (younger, older) activities to use as examples when teaching classrooms of children. These sample activities are included for each curriculum domain, and sample lesson plans are incorporated for each domain and type. Find these activities in Chapters 9 through 15, and in the Appendices.
  • Readily identify the most important professional terms and vocabulary presented throughout the text aided by the Glossary of key words.
  • A comprehensive observation tool is provided for all instructors adopting the text. The Instructor’s Manual can be used to observe college students in the classroom and rate their proficiency with the skills being taught in your course.

Part 1 — Teaching in Early Childhood Programs

 

Chapter 1 – Ready, Set, Go! : Teaching in Developmentally Appropriate Programs

 

Chapter 2 — What You Need to Know to Help Children Grow: Preparing to Teach

 

Chapter 3 – More than a Referee: Effective Child Guidance Strategies

 

Chapter 4 — Teacher, Teacher, What Do You See: Observing and Documenting Children’s Learning

 

Chapter 5 – Roadmaps to Success: Lesson Plans as Teaching Tools

 

Chapter 6 — Up Close and Personal: Teaching Children in Small Groups

 

Chapter 7 – Centered on Learning: Creating and Maintaining Activity Areas Indoors and Outside

 

Chapter 8 — All Together: Teaching Children in Whole Groups

 

Part 2: The Curriculum

 

Chapter 9 – The Aesthetic Domain: Celebrating the Artist Within

  

Chapter 10 — The Affective Domain: Exploring the Inner Self

 

Chapter 11 – The Cognitive Domain Part 1: Nurturing Young Scientists

 

Chapter 12 — The Cognitive Domain Part 2: Fostering Mathematical Thinking

 

Chapter 13 – The Language Domain: Enhancing Communication

 

Chapter 14 — The Physical Domain

 

Chapter 15 – The Social Domain: Interacting with Others

 

Part 3: Moving Forward

 

Chapter 16 - Projects and Themes

  

Appendix A – Sample Lesson Plans

Marjorie Kostelnik, Ph.D. began her career in early childhood education as a Head Start teacher and has been involved in educating children and teachers ever since. Following several years in the classroom, she received her master’s degree and doctorate in Human Development and Family Studies from Penn State University. She was on the faculty at Michigan State for 22 years, serving as Program Supervisor of the Child Development Laboratories and then as chair of the Department of Family and Child Ecology. During her time in Michigan, she worked with early childhood educators in more than 100 programs developing curriculum, enhancing children’s school readiness, and working with teachers to develop positive child guidance strategies. An author of 16 books, Dr. Kostelnik is now dean of the College of Education and Human Sciences at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. A former vice president of NAEYC, Marjorie currently serves on the Great Plains Interactive Distance Education Alliance Board (a national distance-education consortium), the Dimensions Foundation Board (focused on early childhood nature education), and the Malaika Foundation Board (focused on global education).

Michelle L. Rupiper is currently an Associate Professor of Practice and the Director of the Ruth Staples Child Development Laboratory at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln where she has taught since 1994. She has served as a classroom teacher for infants through school-aged children as well as directed community-based programs during her career. Her belief that children deserve well-prepared, competent teachers who understand how children learn and are equipped to meet their needs has resulted in her conducting numerous national, regional and state presentations as well as presentations to faculty in Kenya, Mongolia, Australia and China. She is active in several professional organizations, having served on the National Affiliate Council of NAEYC, president of Midwest AEYC and Nebraska AEYC and on the board of the National Coalition for Campus Children’s Centers.

Anne K. Soderman taught young children for seven years before completing her doctorate and joining the faculty at Michigan State University. For 28 years she taught courses on early childhood curriculum and assessment. During that time, she received the Distinguished Faculty award and served as Acting Chair, also consulting with educators in curriculum and assessment nationally and in over 27 international settings. She has co-authored five books and numerous journal articles on literacy and assessment. For the past six years, she has been working with teachers and administrators in Beijing, China, creating an international school that now serves families and children from more than 25 nations and enrolled in nursery through grade four.  

Alice Phipps Whiren has had an extensive career in early education teaching pre-kindergarten children, working with Head Start, consulting with several full-time childcare programs, and supervising the laboratories of Michigan State University where she has taught pre-service education students in courses related to professional practice. A prolific writer, she has co-authored several texts for early childhood teachers including: Guiding Children’s Social Development and Learning, 7th ed., (Cengage Learning, 2012), Developmentally Appropriate Curriculum: Best Practices in Early Childhood Education, 5th ed., (Pearson, 2011), and Children with Special Needs:  Lessons for Early Childhood Professionals (Teachers College Press, 2002).

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