Skip to main content

HELP! Approved Curriculum

I'm creating a new training for folks in Michigan, as we are going through a Quality Improvement Program. One of the "point" areas in the assessment includes using one state approved curriculum. 


The list of approved curriculum is currently as follows:

Bank Street
Creative Curriculum (PreSchool)
Creative Curriculum (Infant and Toddler)
Creative Curriculum for Family Child Care
High Scope (PreSchool)
High Scope (Infant and Toddler)
Jackson Early Head Start Curriculum Guide
Parents as Teachers
Project Approach
Thematic Approach from MSU (Mississippi State University)
Montessori
Partners for a Healthy Baby
Reggio Emilia
Tools of the Mind

I would love to share insight from folks who are actively using one of these curriculum in your center/program/home. OF course I will give you credit and send folks to find out more from your websites/blogs (if you have one). I intend to make this training session available online for those looking to make a change in order to meet a higher quality rating on the scale. IF you are interested in being interviewed for this project, please email me at amyahola@hotmail.com

Comments

Anonymous said…
We use Creative Curriculum in our preschool program, along with a few other curriculums (Letter People and Every Day Math) I’m sure it goes without saying, but I think it’s all about balancing any program with other programs and ideas. We mostly use the program for a guideline in areas such as room arrangement and lesson planning. I am currently redesigning my science area around a watered down version of this curriculum. The idea is the children pick a topic, or you select a topic based on what you have seen the children show an interest in. You continue with the topic until a new one sparks their interest. One example was you notice the children are very interested in the playground balls. You do your overall theme around balls. Then you notice they are becoming more interested in building ramps for the balls. New topic! Creative Curriculum does have some nice resources available (for purchase).

Honestly I have only looked at the others you mention in classes and research. As I understand it, Bank Street and Project Approach are along the same lines of focusing on one topic and all aspects of that topic until the children change focus. I visited a Montessori school before over the course of a week, and love to pull some of their fine motor and center activities into my classroom. We work on small group activities mostly, but I look to Montessori for ideas about activities preschoolers can do alone and independently.

Good luck!
My experience with Creative Curriculum preschool is short, but I personally did not like the subject areas. It was great for assessment and some ideas. I found that it did not give you the materials you would need for each lesson and in a small town they were hard to come by. I also did not think the books they supplied were age appropriate.
Tom Bedard said…
Amy, check out the Minnesota Reggio Network newsletter. There is a teacher profile in that newsletter which explains one teacher's journey in understanding the Reggio Emilia approach. It is an approach to EC not a curriculum. Here is the link: http://www.mnreggio.org/?page_id=10
jwg said…
Am I the only one who finds it sad that all these so called Quality Improvement programs insist the providers, be they centers or homes, base their curriculum on somebody else's ideas? Whatever happened to the concept that good curriculum is based on the kids before you at the time and everything, from goals to activities to routines is based on that? Sure, it's nice to have a framework and a general idea of the kinds of things kids probably need to know by the time they hit school but beyond that I wouldn't want to know in October what we will be doing in June. In addition, many of the curricula you mentioned require a tremendous amount of documentation and documentation carried to extreme takes time that could be better spent with kids. I've been in the field for close to 40 years and while I recognize the need for more recognition of what we do I am disturbed by the whole institutionalization of the field. The downward spiral seems to have started as Universal Pre-K grew and I am pessimistic about it getting any better.

Popular posts from this blog

Easter Egg Caterpillars!

OOOPS! This post has moved, please click on the photo to be redirected!

My friend died

 I learned a hell of a lot from Dan Hodgins.  He was mentor, a friend, and a "bone shaker" for many of us in the field of Early Childhood Education. He was and will always be a champion for children, and protector of childhood.   I have so many great memories of time spent with him, it just doesn't seem like we had enough time. Dan died this past Saturday.  Interestingly enough, Dan and I talked about death quite a bit. It is one of those topics that isn't talked about all that much in our field, but is super important. All living things eat, all living things poop, and all living things die.  Dan and I recorded a podcast for awhile called "Shaking Bones." Dan was always shaking bones, even before I met him. To say I was honored to be asked to be his co-host would be putting it lightly. I loved recording with him. He was never afraid to touch on topics that were a bit edgy, or issues that sometimes weren't talked about much at all.  We even...

A Few Ideas With Marker Caps (As Promised)

Yesterday, I hope I convinced you not to throw away your markers that "don't work." Today, I will share with you a few ideas for what to do with all of the caps. The possibilities are nearly endless, but here are a few of our recent creations: 1) A Leprechaun/Fairy Ladder/Rope Ladder: 2) #1 if not permanently secured can also double as a rope bridge: 3) #1/#2 can also be made into a train track for your homemade trains :). (No photo available) 4) You can use them as beads for a necklace: 5) You could make them into a wind chime. (No photo available). 6. You can use them as small manipulatives to count, sort, and make patterns with. (No photo available). 7) You could use them as playing pieces in your own homemade board game. (No photo available). 8) You could put them on a wire and glue them in place to make a twirling whirly-gig. 9) You could top them with a lid from a milk jug to make tiny tables or toadstools. 10) You could make them...