More than three‑quarters of students from low‑income households
Data about students' economic need comes from the National Center for Education Statistics, via our partners at MDR Education.
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My hope is to receive a sensory table that can be utilized for science experiments for our preschool lab in my Child Development class. My Child Development II & III students plan and teach lessons to preschool aged students in our spring semester class. This table will allow the high school students in grades 10-12 to plan a weekly experiment that they can then teach to our incoming preschoolers to awaken their minds and senses to the fun of science!
The Child Development students plan lessons and lead circle time activities with reading children's literature, planning fine and gross motor activities, crafts, and preparing healthy snacks. A sensory table would be a wonderful addition, that my students suggested, so that they could be more creative with their lessons and have a set place to conduct fun experiments like "Will it sink or will it float?"
Additional sensory ideas are color volcano eruptions, a sticky slime pit, creating Oobleck, and using Kinetic sand. This table would allow for a mobile location within our classroom to conduct our experiments and allow us the ability to clean or cover the area for later usage/storage in the classroom.
About my class
My hope is to receive a sensory table that can be utilized for science experiments for our preschool lab in my Child Development class. My Child Development II & III students plan and teach lessons to preschool aged students in our spring semester class. This table will allow the high school students in grades 10-12 to plan a weekly experiment that they can then teach to our incoming preschoolers to awaken their minds and senses to the fun of science!
The Child Development students plan lessons and lead circle time activities with reading children's literature, planning fine and gross motor activities, crafts, and preparing healthy snacks. A sensory table would be a wonderful addition, that my students suggested, so that they could be more creative with their lessons and have a set place to conduct fun experiments like "Will it sink or will it float?"
Additional sensory ideas are color volcano eruptions, a sticky slime pit, creating Oobleck, and using Kinetic sand. This table would allow for a mobile location within our classroom to conduct our experiments and allow us the ability to clean or cover the area for later usage/storage in the classroom.