Volunteer Opportunities Common Ground Volunteer Opportunities Common Ground

GIVE TIME: Teacher Volunteers Needed!

We are calling on our fantastic parent community for a very unique volunteer opportunity!

We are looking for five parent volunteers a month to be on-call substitute teachers. These volunteers would be willing to go through a background check process and be willing to watch over a classroom should the need arise.

Please Note — This rarely happens. In the past we have only had the need for parent volunteers to help with watching classrooms while we allow our teachers to vote on election days. However, if the need did arise to have someone watch a classroom, we want to put our children in the hands of someone in our community we trust with a verified background check.

If you are interested, please contact either Ms. Liz or Ms. LJ for more details!

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Every Day is a Holiday: HAT DAY!

THIS WEEK, FRIDAY, JANUARY 15TH, IS HAT DAY!

Big Hats! Little Hats! Long Hats! Short Hats! Hats with Spots! Hats with Ears! Homemade and Store-bought! Paper and Cloth!

We are celebrating HAT DAY on Friday at Common Ground and we are inviting EVERYONE to participate!

If you are a parent, please send your kiddo to school in their favorite hat! Please wear YOUR hat and send us a photo! We will make a collage just for the school so that we can all see how together we are, even apart.

If you feel comfortable posting on facebook, please post your picture in our prompt on the day and share the prompt! Lets see how many HAT pictures we can get!!

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Common Ground Common Ground

Childcare Staff Vaccination Plans

This weekend the state, and more importantly Fairfax County, has opened up vaccination for group 1b! This is exciting news because childcare center workers (and teachers) are included in this priority group. The state has outlined the following priority queue within group 1b:

  1. Police, Fire, and Hazmat

  2. Corrections and homeless shelter workers

  3. Childcare/K-12 Teachers/Staff

  4. Food and Agriculture (including Veterinarians)

  5. Manufacturing

  6. Grocery store workers

  7. Public transit workers

  8. Mail carriers (USPS and private)

  9. Officials needed to maintain continuity of government

Currently, vaccination for groups 1 and 2 are beginning this week, with the coordination for 1b group 3 beginning on January 16th.

Common Ground is still in the tentative planning phase, however our priorities are:

  • equitable access for all staff members to vaccination

  • the ability to get staff vaccinated as quickly as possible

  • the time for staff to work through any vaccine hesitancy with their personal physician prior to our vaccination day(s)

With this in mind, we are hoping to get the entire staff vaccinated on the same day (two - both doses 21-28 days apart depending on the vaccine) which will necessitate closing the center for two “vaccination teacher work days” due to the fact that classroom pods cannot operate if they are missing a staff member.

We do not have dates for this yet, but will communicate as quickly as we can so that you can make arrangements for possible closure days. We thank you for your continued support of Common Ground and our efforts to protect our community.

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GIVE TIME: Fill out this Department of Education survey!


Dear Families,

The Virginia Department of Education (VDOE), the Virginia Early Childhood Foundation (VECF), and the University of Virginia are conducting the 2020 Virginia Survey of Families with Young Children. The purpose of this survey is to better understand children’s care and/or education experiences during COVID-19.

Please take few moments to complete this survey by January 25th: vafamilysurvey.info  

The purpose of this survey is to better understand children’s care and/or education experiences during COVID-19. 

  • All Virginia families of young children, birth through kindergarten, can take the survey. 

  • The survey will take about 10-15 minutes and is voluntary. 

  • The survey is available online in English or Spanish. 

  • Families can take it on their phone, tablet, or computer using the link above. 

  • All information from this survey is anonymous. The survey does not ask families for their names or their programs’ names. 

  • The survey is about their children’s care and/or education experiences during COVID-19. 

  • The survey is not about evaluating any program. 

Please make sure to share this this post with every Virginia resident that you know that had a young child, birth through kindergarten so that we can help the VDOE, VECF, and UVA gather this information.

Thank you so much for your help and participation on this!

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Teacher Tips Common Ground Teacher Tips Common Ground

Teacher Tips: Emergent Writers Need Peer Input

After my previous post about kindergarten readiness and those three and four year olds who experienced the Covid-19 quarantine, I started doing more research. I wanted to see if there were any concerns from experts on how key aspects of a preschool curriculum could be implemented at home effectively.

Serendipitously, Office for Children was offering a class for teachers on how to provide ideal environment and instruction for emergent writers! I signed up immediately. As a teacher and a parent, it seemed like an essential course for me to provide my students (and kids!) as much support as I could.

Here are some key aspects of the class that can be implemented both at home and in the classroom!

The educators discussed the writing environment extensively.

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  1. Have many items labeled as possible to help children begin to associate symbolic words with tangible objects. It is even better if you can provide a picture. A child begins to recognize the connection between pictures and real items first, which helps them practice that symbolic association. A trash can label would look something like this.

  2. Have several different types of writing implements, paying attention to how easy they are to grasp and the pressure that needs to be used. For instance, a marker is a much easier implement to use than a crayon because it is larger and requires less force to create with.

  3. Book making is fun, creative, and gives a child purpose. Have book making supplies readily on hand, and keep them so that your child knows what they have created is valuable! Here are instructions for making a fun book with a stick for a spine and other found materials!

  4. READ TO THEM. Have books all around. Change them up so that the books don’t just blend into the environment. Show the kiddos all different kinds of authors so they can begin to recognize different styles! This helps them understand that people can communicate and use words differently, and they can begin to develop their own taste. Try to always read the words as they are written so that children understand you’re not just making up what you’re saying, that the words themselves have a consistent meaning.

  5. Put pictures of animals, plants, stars, favorite characters, around on the walls. Kids will look at these and be inspired to write on subjects they may not have thought of before! If they copy stories they’ve seen or read before, good!

  6. DRAWING IS EXCELLENT FOR EMERGENT WRITING! Drawing means they are working to produce their own pictures and symbols to convey meaning. Writing the words they are saying and spelling them out carefully will help them see how the letters and words relate to their thoughts! KEEP IN MIND that you should also encourage the children to add more detail to their pictures before relying too heavily on the words you add. This will help them work to convey meaning instead of letting you do it.

  7. ENTHUSIASM. IS. KEY. Their enthusiasm will carry them through the practice, will encourage them to continue their process even when it’s frustrating. YOUR enthusiasm will encourage them and help them fly forward without fear of failure! Ask them leading questions like “Oh Wow! What happens next? How does it end?” This not only helps them with story sequencing, but it lets them know that wherever they are in the process, you are happy to be there sharing their story.

  8. TREAT THEIR WORK WITH DIGNITY. I’m not saying you have to keep every drawing or scrap of paper with art on it. I am saying to be consistent with # 7, keep ongoing projects in the same place so that they can return, encourage them to move forward in their studies rather than critiquing WHERE they are in the process.

9. Peer Interaction during the process of emergent writing is key.

There are a lot of processes you can do at home that are helpful and important. But research has shown that other children thrive in an environment when they can watch how their peers practice drawing and writing. They copy each other. They observe different style interpretations. They listen as their teachers give different instructions to their friends. When I was teaching in the four year old classroom, I was blown away by how one child drawing volcanoes transformed into the entire class drawing volcanoes. They told different stories, they extrapolated off of each other’s ideas, they asked big questions that spun off into entire lessons. They were fascinated, excited to draw in their journals and tell me THEIR version of the volcano story. Someone would add a princess, someone would add a PAW PATROL pup, and then another kid would do the same thing the next day, inspired by their friends. Even in COVID times when the numbers are low, even if they have to sit apart at their own desks with their own implements, children that can be around their peers while they practice show greater strides in all aspects of writing, story telling, and literary comprehension.

Educators are encouraged to call their children “authors” and let them “read” stories to their friends. Letting them sit in an “author’s chair” is even better. Even if they’re just reciting a memorized passage, or making up words for their pictures, they have autonomy over the story they are telling. This inspires other children to want to build their story to share.

One of my favorite things to do with my students is to come up with a premise and allow the students to write the story with me. They can introduce characters to the story, provide what happens “next,” I’ve even had my older students come up with lines for rhyming words that match the story! They riff off of each other and begin to understand the structure and sequencing of a story while having fun together. Afterwards they draw the pictures for each page. We put together the book and each child can stand up and read THEIR page in the book we all created together.

Experiences like the those described above show how essential and enriching peers are to the writing learning process. Wonder, creativity, practice, immersion, these are the building blocks to writing success, but all of those things are SUPER CHARGED with friends at your side.

Questions? Comments? Experiences to Share? Please comment below! We love to share our world with you.

Ms. LJ

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