Goals - Explorers

Academic Objectives

Our goal for our Explorers students is that they explore the basic skills and conceptual building blocks that lay the groundwork for Class One. How do we accomplish these objectives?

Pre-reading and Early Reading

Our Explorer students chart unknown regions as they learn to distinguish sounds, identify phonograms, decode words and narrate orally. They investigate stories—and learn to predict outcomes, to recognize likenesses, to interpret main ideas, and to sequence events.  They participate in other language-eliciting activities such as narration (telling back a story they have heard), picture studies (orally describing what they see in a painting), and composer studies (hearing classical music and describing what they heard).

Math

Explorers discover the basics of number, shape, time, and size.  They learn the calendar, days of the week, telling time, along with charting the weather, recognizing less than/greater than, and understanding frequency.   These are the building blocks for first grade math.

Small Motor Skills

Students at this age are developing the basic small muscle control to hold a pencil correctly in order consistently to draw lines, shapes, and letters consistently.   

Large Motor Skills

For their large motor development, Explorers need lots of opportunities to develop their kinesthetic intelligence.  They do so through recess, games, movement exercises, as will as by means of short periods of practicing sitting up straight or lining up and walking in a line.  

Nature Studies

We cultivate a love of scientific discovery early.  Each classroom has a nature table that is populated by articles students collect and study.  Frequent nature walks lead to discussion, research, and discovery.

Other Activities

The Explorers other activities are many, including read alouds and literature discussions, specialized art and music study. As they participate in these activities, TWS’s Explorers are developing speaking skills, number skills, reading skills, listening skills, visual skills, and physical skills (both large and small motor). In many ways, the “academic expanses” they travel are every bit as challenging as those miles of waves that Columbus braved.

Habits

Within this academic and discovery framework, we promote our students’ acquisition of habits of character that will help them for years to come both in studies and in life. For example, we model and teach “the habit of attention,” helping our Explorers to listen without interrupting and to follow oral directions after one hearing.  We train our students in the habits of courtesy and kindness, teaching them what constitute good classroom manners, encouraging them to gain attention through positive behaviors, and guiding them to work well with others.  We instruct in the “habit of orderliness” which involves using property carefully, taking turns, cooperating and practicing self-control.