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  • Could this be a normal day in preschool?

  • Every hour every an average of sixty conflicts occur in a preschool room.

  • One per minute.

  • No wonder research shows that attendance in pre-school centres can hinder the

  • rate at which children develop social skills and increase behavior problems

  • for years to come.

  • Data does show that a child's cognitive function can improve

  • but in the real world how helpful is intelligence if you can't get along with others?

  • The way we organize preschool today is a

  • very new idea.

  • For millennium children were cared for in multi-age groups.

  • Infants, two-year-olds, four and nine-year-old would all be cared for

  • together.

  • This guaranteed that children would have different needs and also different skill

  • sets to help within the group.

  • Preschools typically put the same age children together in the same room.

  • This presents a problem because the third and fourth years of life are some

  • of our most aggressive years. Hitting,

  • pushing, shoving, and screaming are the problem solving tools available to them.

  • For many kids it's just too much and the last choice is to simply give up.

  • Aggressive acts, suspensions, and expulsions in preschool are much higher

  • than in grades

  • kindergarten through twelfth.

  • Expulsion rates

  • in these grades are two students

  • per a thousand.

  • While children in preschool are expelled at a rate that is thirteen hundred percent higher.

  • Under normal circumstances

  • a preschoolers brain is ready to learn empathy, compassion, patience,

  • emotional self control, and how to solve conflicts peacefully.

  • How could any child learn or any educator teach

  • when a conflict happens

  • every

  • single minute?

  • The current demands on both adults and children

  • are too great.

  • This dilemma must

  • be addressed.

  • The good news is that we have a proven solution so that

  • preschool will benefit children in both

  • cognitive and social ways.

  • Every child must learn how to stand up to aggression,

  • and teach the other children how they want to be treated.

  • What's the problem? Alex squeezed me too hard.

  • Oh, he squeezed you too hard.

  • Do you have something that you could say to him

  • so that he could do it different next time?

  • What would you say? Please next time do it softer.

  • Can we practice? Okay. Show me.

  • Do a soft hug. That's better. You did it.

  • You touched Stephanie and

  • you waited for her to look. You asked her

  • for what you wanted. Ready?

  • Stop!

  • I don't like it. I want my cupcake back. Yeah? Give it back.

  • Try one more time. With me. I want to hear. Stop. I don't like it. I want my cupcake back.

  • Then you say. "Please give it

  • back."

  • I bet she would if you used your big voice.

  • Conscious Discipline provides teachers and parents with these skills.

  • This allows them

  • to empower all children

  • to be successful

  • and personally resilient members of society.

  • We can shift this problem

  • and we can do it today.

  • Let's start the conversation.

  • Contact us immediately. Together we can make a difference.

  • ConsciousDiscipline.com

Could this be a normal day in preschool?

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