Lessons for the Littlest Terps

Center for Young Children鈥檚 Students Trek Across Campus to Understand the World
Center for Young Children (CYC) kindergarteners Abigail Lynn and Nora Hurst examine a Bess beetle during a field trip to UMD's Insect Zoo.

Students in protective glasses fidgeted beneath hanging glass beakers in a 含羞草研究所 chemistry lab, awaiting a lesson on the states of matter with the attention span of 5-year-olds.

So for this group of preschoolers, Senior Lecturer Lenea Stocker Ph.D. 鈥13 skipped the Bunsen burners. She instead pulled out red, white and blue Legos鈥攆amiliar to her audience and a perfect metaphor for the subject. After all, she pointed out, atoms are the building blocks of matter.

The field trip is one of dozens that the Center for Young Children (CYC), a pre-K and kindergarten program in the College of Education, takes its classes on each year across the 含羞草研究所 campus. Celebrating its 75th anniversary this year, the CYC has long used labs and gardens and construction sites as an extension of its building just beyond the Denton Community (even if the 3- to 6-year-olds sometimes need a fruit pouch pick-me-up before they walk back).

鈥淗ands-on experiences are essential for our program. The children can interact, question the experts, and draw conclusions,鈥 said teacher Cecilia Fowler 鈥03. 鈥淥n our way here, a child pointed to the bricks and told me, 鈥楾hat鈥檚 a liquid.鈥 I said, 鈥楬mm, that鈥檚 interesting. Why do you think that?鈥 And now, on the way back, we鈥檒l talk about it again.鈥

The CYC takes a 鈥減roject鈥 approach, in which its 90 children delve deeply into a particular topic for weeks or even months. It鈥檚 a research-based method of teaching that makes the curriculum accessible for learners of all levels, including children who are multilingual or have disabilities. That鈥檚 because the CYC is not only a school, but also a lab for UMD human development and early childhood investigators, as well as a demonstration site for College of Education students.

鈥淲hat UMD students see when they come here is what research tells them reflects the way that children learn and become the most successful,鈥 said CYC Director Jennifer Smallwood-Holmes.

That鈥檚 evident in how CYC teachers let students lead through project-based work, which is more active and engaging than traditional teaching methods, she said. For each topic, teachers find out what students already know (including misunderstandings), the types of experiences they鈥檝e had and what they want to know, helping them make sense of the world around them.

One morning at UMD鈥檚 Insect Zoo, kindergartener Sebastian Lucic had an urgent question: 鈥淐an you make him poop?鈥 he asked entomology master鈥檚 student Eric Hartell as he offered up a millipede for Lucic and his classmates to pet.

鈥淣o, but his poop is very good for the soil,鈥 Hartell said. Lucic thought about it, then announced he was naming the creature 鈥淪tripey.鈥

After a month-long study of insects, the children were eager to handle creepy-crawlies in the Plant Sciences Building. A leopard grasshopper, vividly red and yellow, was 鈥渢ickly and sticky,鈥 said one brave tot. Black Bess beetles, the size of a large paperclip, wandered from tiny hand to tiny hand. 鈥淗e loves you, I think,鈥 said Abigail Lynn to Nora Hurst.

With two previous trips to the woods and ponds near the CYC to find bugs on their own, the children didn鈥檛 need as much simplifying as Hartell had imagined, he said. They shouted out answers to the questions entomology Faculty Assistant Todd Waters asked, such as the number of legs insects have, what pollinators are and which animals eat bugs.

鈥淲e always think before we start a project, 鈥楧o we have resources we can tap into on campus?鈥欌 said teacher Amy Laakso 鈥09, M.Ed. 鈥17. 鈥淭hese are really enriching experiences that they remember.鈥

Last school year, she led her kindergarten class in two projects: bikes and scooters in the fall, visiting RecWell鈥檚 Bike Shop, and noodles in the spring, with classroom cooking lessons and a trip to Noodles and Company on Baltimore Avenue.

The micromobility study was a particular hit with Mark Wakefield鈥檚 6-year-old daughter, Naomi, he said.

鈥淪he was actually learning to shift from a balance bike to a two-wheel bike,鈥 said Wakefield, instrumental ensembles manager at the School of Music. 鈥淪he came home and told me all the different parts that they learned about at the bike shop, and it just made her want to get out there.鈥 By the end of the semester, Naomi was zooming independently on two wheels.

The experiences expand students鈥 worldviews beyond the lessons at hand. For example, seeing Stocker wear a lab coat and demonstrate 鈥渆lephant toothpaste鈥 pouring out of a giant beaker鈥攚hen many of the children had been exposed to images only of male scientists鈥攚as eye-opening and prompted questions.

The natural curiosity that the curriculum sparks in the children is his favorite aspect of the CYC, said Wakefield. 鈥淭o have them engaged and feeling ownership of their learning is the biggest thing.鈥

  1. Center for Young Children students gasp in awe as foam bubbles out of a giant beaker during a chemistry lab demonstration.
  2. Center for Young Children (CYC) students don fuzzy gloves to hold bubbles of carbon dioxide gas as part of a lesson on states of matter.
  3. Center for Young Children (CYC) kindergartener Chen-shih Lee holds a 20-year-old tarantula during a trip to the Insect Zoo, as teacher Cecilia Fowler looks on the background.
  4. Students at the Center for Young Children visit sites around the UMD campus, such as chemistry labs, to learn about the world.