Saturday, September 29, 2018

Being a Kindergarten Teacher; it's more than clapping and singing



Some people were questioned my decision when I decided to be a kindergarten teacher last year. They thought it was too “easy” to be a kindergarten teacher. Conversely, I do think being a kindy teacher is really challenging.  All of children development aspects are critical especially in their first five years because it’s the time to shape the adults they will become (Tomlinson, 2015). In these critical years, they will learn and develop social emotional, language, fine and gross motor skills, and cognitive ability that will remain with them for the rest of their life. What a big responsibility!


Days by days I found out many interesting things about children. The first weeks of my journey as a kindergarten teacher were full of buzz of children’ babble.  I remember there was a child crying when he couldn’t close the zipper of his bag, he asked for my help, it happened every day for about 3 weeks. The other day I found out there was a child who had difficulty in putting on the socks and buttoning the clothes. The other problems were in cutting things following the certain pattern or walking through a balance beam. The next ones were children who prefer to cry instead of conveying what they want and children who always told me all of the things which they see, hear and experience. Some children even fight for toys and being mad at each other. So, do you still think teaching kids is easy? My friend from Early Childhood Graduate once said, teaching kindergarten is not just about “clapping and singing”. It’s more than that, dear. It needs a never ending patience to teach “basic stuffs---things that adult think those are easy. What’s so difficult to zip the backpack up? But hey, that’s easy for you, not for the kids. Perhaps, it’s their first time to zip the backpack up, so they don’t familiar with the situation, or their muscle isn’t strong yet, or they just panick to see their friend can do that easily. There are a lot of possibilities.

Those experiences with kids intrigued my curiousity so that I decided to read some books. I was amazed by first chapter of Robert Fulghum’s book entitled All I Really Need to Know I Learned in Kindergarten (1986), he said “The Kindergarten Credo is not kid stuff. It is not simple. It is elemental.” Further, he emphasized that “wisdom was not at the top of the graduate-school mountain, but there in the sandpile on Sunday School.” Here are some things that I agree with Fulghum about what we learned in kindergarten which are beneficial for the rest of our lives;

“Share everything.
Play fair.
Don’t hit people.
Put things back where you found them.
Clean up your own mess.
Don’t take things that aren’t yours.
Say you’re sorry when you hurt somebody.
Wash your hands before you eat.
Flush.
Warm cookies and milk are good for you.
Take a nap every afternoon.
When you out into the world, watch out for the traffic, hold hands and stick together.
Goldfish and hamsters and white mice and even the little seed in the styrofoam cup—they all die. So do we.”

Can you imagine those golden rules are applied to adults life?----family, work and government life?

Sometimes, adults think that there is nothing that they couldn’t do. They act like they know everything and stop learning. But, dear, I think they forget that learning is a long life skill. Please, do remember what we’ve learned in kindergarten.

Some people want an instant result like they send their kids to kindergarten to be able to read. However, we should pay attention to the long process before finally those kids will be able to read. According to Paramita (2017), a Montessorian, there are 7 steps that the children should learn before they finally can read. First, train to extend the attention span and train to observe. Children can train their attention span by spooning, pouring the water from a jug to a glass, etc.

Picture 1 Spoonning Activity


Meanwhile, children can learn to observe things, animals and plants in their environment, just talk about the neighborhood. Second, differentiate shapes, colours, sizes and sounds. Third, recognize sandpapper letter. 

Picture 2 Sandpaper Letter

Fourth, recognize the sound of a letter in a word with “Objects Box”. Fifth, train the ability to read by reading “Reading box, words bucklet, Verbs Card, Noun Cards, and the example of Sentences.” Next, reading sentences and correlate them with pictures. After that, reading picture story and story bucklet." Finally, children will be able to read.

So, dear, teaching kids is not that easy.

After all, I never regret my decision last year to be a kindergarten teacher. I learn a lot from my very first professional experiences after I graduated from university. It reminds me to my kindergarten teacher, a big salute to Ibu Ati, Ibu Lilis and all of dedicated kindergarten teachers all over the world.

Works Cited


Fulghum, R. (1986). All I Really Need to Know I learned In Kindergarten. New York: The Random House Publishing Group.
Montessori Album. (2017). Dry Spooning. Retrieved from http://www.montessorialbum.com/montessori/index.php?title=Dry_Spooning 
Montessori Primary Guide. (n.d) Sandpaper Letters. Retrieved from http://www.infomontessori.com/language/written-language-sandpaper-letters.htm
Paramita, V. D. (2017). Jatuh Hati Pada Montessori. Jakarta: PT Bentang Pustaka.
Tomlinson, A. (2015, September 17). Why the first five years of a child's development are the most important. Retrieved from The National: amp.thenational.ae/arts

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