rivka: (Alex running)
[personal profile] rivka
I just scheduled a visit to a nursery school for next Thursday.

Well, nursery school/daycare. They have both. All the kids do nursery school in the morning, and you can either bring them home at noon or have them stay for lunch, nap, and afternoon daycare. They have a two-year-old classroom. If we like the school, we'll be signing Alex up to start in May.

I had despaired of finding a good play-based nursery school, because all of the ones that advertise in Baltimore's Child magazine talk about "computer literacy" and "pre-reading skills" and "kindergarten readiness." It's part of a trend that, unbelievably, includes academic tutoring for 3-5 year olds. From the way things are going I do predict that Alex will master preschool concepts early and be reading by three or four - but I am utterly opposed, philosophically, to sending her to an "academic" nursery school where those concepts are formally presented.

My friend Suzanne passed on some materials about the Bolton Hill nursery school. "Play is a child's work," the flyer began, and went on to explain that young children learn best from exploring their world, not from formal instruction. The teachers provide a rich environment - music, art supplies, pretend play equipment, a courtyard and a nearby playground for outdoor play, books, building materials - and help the children negotiate social interactions. They do all the traditional nursery school projects, like sprouting seeds in Dixie cups and visiting a fire station, but "rarely will you enter a classroom and see all the children seated at a table doing the same art project." It seems very free.

Best of all: they offer a flexible schedule - anywhere from 1-5 half and/or whole days a week - and they are much cheaper than a nanny. They're located just six blocks from our house, so we can walk there. And Suzanne's son Leo, who is in playgroup with Alex, will be going 1.5 days a week - so she would be starting out with a familiar playmate.

Still: nursery school? Already? What a scary thought. And yet, Alex really enjoys being with other kids. We've been thinking that when our current nanny graduates from school and takes a full-time job, we'll probably want to put Alex in group daycare. It's just the word "school" that's making me think "Whoa!"

Date: 2006-09-28 03:06 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tammylc.livejournal.com
Sounds like a great setup. The place Liam goes is similar in some ways. Definitely play based. There's a nice mix of kids who are going part-time and others who are full-time. We like it a lot - I hope it lives up to its press!

My friend Sue's 3-year-old just started going to pre-school 2 days a week. She found the whole "school!" thing to be a scary thought/ big transition too. I never got that, because since we've always used a group daycare, Liam's been in school since he was 5 months old. I won't get the big "eek - school!" moment until Kindergarten...

Date: 2006-09-28 08:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mjlayman.livejournal.com
I got expelled from nursery school and then kindergarten, but I seem to have managed without.

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