Early Years Bulletin
Summer 2015 vol 2, no 4
Focus on Pre-K and K
editors: Jennifer Baumgartner & Cynthia DiCarlo
Fostering Resilience in Kindergarten: Teaching a Stressed-Out Generation
by Helen Wilson, Louisiana State University
C
hildren around the world encounter various stresses in the form of natural disasters, political violence, malnutrition, maltreatment, and other threats to healthy human development. Resilience research emerged in the aftermath of WWII, bringing attention to the adversity faced by children as a result of the devastation. In recent years, global interest in resiliency science has grown and studies investigate human response and adaptation to adversity. It is estimated that millions of children each year are affected by global disasters, conflict, abuse, neglect, and various forms of exploitation. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Intensive and prolonged stress can lead to a variety of short- and long-term negative health effects. It can disrupt early brain development and compromise functioning of the nervous and immune systems. In addition, childhood stress can lead to health problems later in life including alcoholism, depression, eating disorders, heart disease, cancer, and other chronic diseases. (p. 3) Therefore, it is imperative that educators foster resilience in students in order to promote healthy development across the lifespan. continued on page 5
Contents p. 2 Children’s Books p. 4 Children’s Expressive Language Development p. 7 Child-directed Activity in Preschools p. 8 The Environment as a Learning Tool
A Summer Activity: Beat the Summer Heat With Ice Chalk Make a batch of homemade chalk paint using equal parts corn starch and water. Split the mixture into smaller batches and add in your favorite washable paint colors. Pour the different colors into ice cube trays and freeze them. When it’s time to play, pop the ice chalk out of the trays into a container and let the kids use these ice chalk cubes to draw and experiment on the pavement. The colors get more vibrant as they melt.