Preschool Classroom Observation Examples

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Relationships
The overall strength observed in this preschool classroom would be the teacher herself. She was positive, happy, joyful, and prone to laughter. The positivity demonstrated by this teacher contributes to the children feeling welcomed, excepted, and safe. The teacher’s interactions with children were encouraging and while she greeted the children by name upon their arrival, I didn’t notice this happening throughout the day. She was responsive to children’s questions and requests, however, since she was such an extrovert, she tended to dominate both conversations and play ideas, which minimized opportunities for language expansion and conversations with 4-6 exchanges.
Physical Environment The physical environment of this classroom
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Calendar was on the schedule and was an assigned job, however, the numbers for the calendar weren’t ready, so the teacher improvised and did weather instead. During this observation, the teacher also had trouble finding the song on her I-pad for music and movement, which led to an extended wait time for the children while she found the chosen song. Sitting at circle is hard for children and can lead to mistaken behavior. Organizing the materials before circle would help it to run more seamlessly, be more engaging, and would minimize mistaken behaviors. The specific indicator area that I would like to see improvement in with regards to relationships would be child-directed conversation and play, as the teacher tended to dominate both, minimizing opportunities of conversational exchanges, expanded language, and processing time needed for some children. "Talk is powerful, but what's even more powerful is engaging a child in meaningful interactions — the 'give and take' that is so important to the social, emotional and cognitive development of infants and toddlers," says Dr. Jill Gilkerson (2009). A teacher’s role is to observe and facilitate play, not to direct play; assist with problem solving, redirect undesired behaviors, and expand on children’s play ideas, which will benefit the children’s cognitive development through