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Osceola Charter Preschool

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Play Therapy screening and service available for identified students. 8 ... Play Therapy is an effective therapy that helps children modify their behaviors, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Osceola Charter Preschool


1
Osceola Charter Preschool
  • History of conversation in community
  • Start-up funding
  • Existing community programs suffering to make 4K
    happen
  • On-going state aid funding uncertainty
  • Concerns about pushing children
  • Space availability within schools
  • Identified priority in parent education, not
    education of children

2
Osceola Charter Preschool
  • Why Charter?
  • Funding availability
  • Grants
  • For planning
  • For training
  • For equipment and start-up costs
  • Partnership opportunities expand with charter
    flexibility
  • Flexibility in format
  • Parent education and participation emphasis
  • Strategies to address emotional needs of children
  • Programming tailored to Osceolas unique needs
  • Ability to ease in with format under charter
    umbrella

3
Osceola Charter Preschool
  • Role of Advisory Council
  • Develop work teams in the areas of preschool
    curriculum, parent education, and addressing
    emotional needs of children. (Dec. 2004)
  • Create working plans of key elements of the
    charter school (January/February 2005)
  • Present overall plan and request for charter to
    School District of Osceola Board of Education
    (Spring 2005)
  • Assist in development of implementation grant
    (Summer 2005)
  • Continue in advisory capacity as programming
    begins (Fall 2005/Winter 2005-06)

4
Osceola Charter Preschool
  • Elements that make us unique
  • Parent Education
  • Preschool Curriculum
  • Emotional development programming
  • Research elements for the grant, for our charter
    contract, and to inform District practices in
    literacy and social-emotional development

5
Parent Involvement Education Ways we Involve
Parents/Families
  • PARENT INVOLVEMENT
  • AT LEAST SEVEN CLASSROOM VOLUNTEER ASSIGNMENTS,
    OR NEGOTIATED ALTERNATIVES
  • Communication during school year-
  • Regular contact phone and email.
  • Classroom News/ Newsletters
  • Communication journals
  • School to home bags
  • Family Museums highlighting a particular
    family each week on display.
  • Supporting the schools activities, such as Open
    House, Child Development Days, etc.
  • Involvement in Advisory Council, or its projects
  • Assistance in identifying resources for our
    expanded Family Resource Center
  • PARENT EDUCATION
  • AT LEAST THREE EDUCATIONAL ACTIVITIES EACH YEAR
  • Orientation night-
  • Parent/Teacher Conferences
  • Fall Needs Assessment for identifying workshop
    topics
  • Communication in all types of families.
  • Anger management
  • Aggressive and/or passive children.
  • Effective positive discipline and consistent
    parenting
  • Divorced, Separated and Blended families.
  • Developmentally appropriate reading
    strategies.
  • Motor skills.
  • Multiple Intelligences.
  • Healthy Cooking
  • Balancing busy lives

6
Preschool Curriculum
  • Creative Curriculum as core curriculum
  • Beginning work with cc.net
  • Tracking selected objectives for research work
    with Kindergarten entry longitudnal data
  • Exploring additional literacy elements from
    Teaching Strategies
  • Incorporation of learning centers as part of
    lengthened day this year

7
Social-Emotional Curriculum
  • By accelerating our students social-emotional
    development in the PreK year, we hope to send
    children to Kindergarten ready to learn the
    academic curriculum available in our full-day
    program
  • Core Guidance curriculum using Second Step,
    violence prevention curriculum
  • Responsive Classroom Philosophy in classrooms
  • Morning Meeting, Rules Logical Consequences,
    and Academic Choice elements
  • Play Therapy screening and service available for
    identified students

8
What is Play Therapy?
  • Play Therapy is an effective therapy that helps
    children modify their behaviors, clarify self
    concept, and build healthy relationships.
    Through play, what a child knows best, the child
    engages in a dynamic relationship that enables
    them to express, explore, and make sense of their
    difficult and painful experiences in a way of
    communicating other than using words to describe
    their thoughts, feelings, and perceptions.

9
What is the Play Therapists Role?
  • A Play Therapist is a safe, consistent, reliable
    individual who develops an ongoing relationship
    with a child or group of children through play
    sessions. The therapist uses the play process to
    help children understand their feelings and
    behaviors.
  • A Play Therapist is an support system to the
    teaching staff and parents and available to
    provide education and support.
  • A Play Therapist can hold group play therapy
    sessions or individual play therapy sessions
    consisting of multiple sessions depending on the
    realm of behavioral issues, traumas with a given
    child.

10
Challenges Growing Pains
  • Served 60 children last year 75 this year
  • Working on expanding to private sector partners
    and adding a parallel District program
  • Development of off-shoot program to develop a
    Polk County Early Childhood Council to share
    resources, ideas, programming
  • Blending our Early Childhood children into
    classrooms this year
  • Keeping enrollment data clean for charter school
    entity and our EC-only students

11
Challenges Improvements
  • Working in second implementation year on training
    in literacy, Responsive Classroom, Second Step,
    Technology Integration
  • Refining our parent education offerings,
    registration processes, carpool transportation
    assistance
  • Refining our charter school handbook forms
  • Helping our parents become more self-reliant and
    interdependent---encouraging them to make a
    friend with other parents now that their child
    is in school
  • Exploring how to blend in foreign language
    options for young learners to promote literacy
    development
  • Creating sustainable structures that will extend
    beyond the grant cycles

12
For more information
  • Osceola Charter Preschool
  • C/O Osceola Elementary School
  • 250 10th Avenue
  • Osceola WI 54020
  • (715) 294-1869
  • Teachers Brenda Wheeler Stacey Baier
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