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If your child is between the ages of 3 and 6 and attends a child care center,
preschool, or kindergarten program, the National Association for the Education of Young
Children (NAEYC) suggests you look for these 10 signs to make sure your child is in a good
classroom.
- Children spend most of their playing and working with materials or other children. They
do not wander aimlessly, and they are not expected to sit quietly for long periods of
time.
- Children have access to various activities throughout the day. Look for assorted
building blocks and other construction materials, props for pretend play, picture books,
paints and other art materials, and table toys such as matching games, pegboards, and
puzzles. Children should not all be doing the same thing at the same time.
- Teachers work with individual children, small groups, and the whole group at different
times during the day. They do not spend all their time with the whole group.
- The classroom is decorated with children's original artwork, their own writing with
invented spelling, and stories dictated by children to teachers.
- Children learn numbers and the alphabet in the context of their everyday experiences.
The natural world of plants and animals and meaningful activities like cooking, taking
attendance, or serving snack provide the basis for learning activities.
- Children work on projects and have long periods of time (at least one hour) to play and
explore. Worksheets are used little if at all.
- Children have an opportunity to play outside every day. Outdoor play is never sacrificed
for more instructional time.
- Teachers read books to children individually or in small groups throughout the day, not
just at group story time.
- Curriculum is adapted for those who are ahead as well as those who need additional help.
Teachers recognize that children's different background and experiences mean that they do
not learn the same things at the same time in the same way.
- Children and their parents look forward to school. Parents feel secure about sending
their child to the program. Children are happy to attend; they do not cry regularly or
complain of feeling sick.
Also ask if the program is accredited by NAEYC. NAEYC accredited programs complete a
rigorous self study and external review to prove that they meet standards of excellence in
early childhood education.
Copyright © 1996 by National Association for the Education of Young Children.
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