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"You Can't Catch Me!"-Introducing Young Children to the School Setting

Shirley F. Wyatt
Mansfield Township School, Port Murray, New Jersey

Subject: Language Arts
Grade: Kindergarten

"To the five-year-old, the bridge from home to school is not one easily traveled."

Purpose and Description of Project

School can be a strange and frightening place for the new kindergartner, but Shirley Wyatt's project uses photography to help bridge the home/school gap and familiarize children with school personnel and operations. And she begins this effort before the youngsters even set foot in "this big, wonderful, new, but awesome, place" called school.

A week prior to the opening of school, Wyatt writes a personal letter to each student, asking him or her to "draw me a picture of you" so that "on the first day of school I will know who you are." Receiving and responding to the letter gives parents and child a stimulus for discussing what the child can expect at school, and on opening day, the children are greeted by their own artwork on the class bulletin board. However, that's just the beginning.

The second phase of the project concentrates on having the children meet and get to know the professional and support personnel at the school, including office workers, bus drivers, custodian, cafeteria workers, and others. The focus for these introductions is an adventure during which the children prepare a gingerbread figure, find that it has disappeared, follow clues around the school, and eventually recapture the elusive treat.

Finally, Wyatt adds an extra magic touch to the children's experience by re-creating their prospective first-grade teachers' poses and taking more photographs-but this time with a gingerbread figure somewhere in the background. Then she posts these photos and waits for youngsters to make their miraculous discoveries.

The teacher finds that this three-pronged use of photography helps her students more quickly become comfortable at school, develop a good self-image, learn sequencing of activities, and practice visual discrimination. In addition, they learn about the physical layout of the school, get to know school personnel and understand their roles, and come to appreciate the uses of photographs to record events.

But, most important, concludes Wyatt, the project helps children come to view school as a place "where something wonderful will happen."

Activities

Activities in this project fall into three phases:

Materials, Resources, and Expenses

School personnel were essential resources for this project, according to Wyatt. Among those who participated were the cafeteria staff, custodian, school secretaries, bus driver, school nurse, administrators, and librarian.

Cameras used were Kodak cameras that she borrowed. Eight 10-print packs of instant film were used, and five rolls of TX-120 film. Other materials were stamps, paper, envelopes, gingerbread mix and mold, utensils for batter, chart paper, markers, stickers, crayons, construction paper, and Kraft paper.

Outcomes and Adaptability

Wyatt finds that the children get so involved in their photo-recorded adventures that the "jitters of starting school are left far behind." They also gain a spirit of togetherness and are exposed to the magic of photography. Because the school is located in an area with a highly transient population, Wyatt believes that it is especially important that her students gain a feeling of instant acceptance and quickly learn school survival skills.

The photographs that are taken throughout the project help confirm the children's concept of self, notes the teacher, and the youngsters develop a positive image of school because they quickly get familiar with their physical environment and the people they can turn to for help. They also learn teamwork and to discard their own fears in their concern about their lost comrade-the gingerbread man.

Wyatt also finds that the children display an immediate willingness to go outside their own classroom and to interact with new people. The continuing thematic involvement of the gingerbread figure and the use of photography help the children with recall and sequencing activities. And perhaps most important, the children develop a level of self-confidence that makes them eager to proceed to first grade.

The teacher notes that others can use this unit in whole or part since it breaks neatly into three activity blocks. It could be expanded to include not just school but community "helpers." Teacher and students could also take part in the photo processing and printing if darkroom facilities were available at the school. And, of course, other teachers could focus on other themes.

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