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Curriculum
Any program can claim to be a school and not a day care;
the proof is in the grading. Ask to see the facilities measuring standards, methods of tracking and means of reporting to
parents/families.
We provide child portfolios, report cards, two
conferences and an annual summary.
We are a Literacy Preschool this is why we do not have a
long calendar year or day care hours.
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Dates
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Start of School
August 15th
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September 15th
Cognitive Assessment
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October 1st (10 wek)
1st Quarter Ends
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October 2nd Finalize Grades
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October 7th Parent Conferences
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November - four weeks of grading
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December 15th
2nd Quarter Ends
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December 23rd Annual Progress Portfolio Home
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January - 3 weeks of grading
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February - 4 weeks of grading
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March - 3 weeks of grading
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March 23rd
3rd Quarter Ends
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April 1st - Report Card
4 weeks
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May - 3 weeks
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June - 3 weeks
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Fri., June 12th - Report Cards, Parent Conferences
4th Quarter Ends
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These are the exact Hawaii State Content Standards for four year olds. When you visit our school, you
will see the specific goals under each standard being met before a child leaves for Kindergarten.
Standard: Cognitive
The child:
- demonstrates a broad range of knowledge about the natural and man-made worlds
- demonstrates a broad range of knowledge about the social world
- engages in cooperative and elaborate dramatic play
- is able to place events and experiences in time
- demonstrates spatial awareness in play and language
- has beginning understanding of counting and quantity
- duplicates and extends simple patterns
- places a set of 3-5 unfamiliar objects in graduated order
- classifies by sorting into groups and by noticing a range of classes to which things belong
- knows physical features and functions of objects
Standard: Language and Literacy
The child:
- talks with others about past, present and future events with considerable detail
- retells a cohesive story including a variety of elements (e.g. characters, setting, main events, sequencing, endings,
emotional states)
- has an age-appropriate vocabulary including a range of word types
- prints name and experiments with writing
- has an emerging awareness of links between letters and sounds
- identifies letters and common graphic symbols
- understands that print conveys meaning and serves a function
- knows book and basic reading conventions
Standard: Social
The child:
- initiates & sustains positive interactions with other children
- makes friends (demonstrates social support and loyalty, maintains relationships over time, refers to particular children
as friends)
- is able to separate from parents with minimal difficulty
- makes independent decisions about activities
- is competent in self-help skills and requires minimal adult assistance
- handles conflicts constructively and independently
- is assertive when confrontations arise (e.g. stands up for themselves, does not avoid conflict)
- interacts cooperatively with adults and children
- participates in classroom routines and follows rules with minimal reminders
- develops a variety of strategies for solving difficult problems with materials
- develops a variety of strategies for solving problems with children and adults
- shows persistence in solving problems
- expresses a range of feelings in appropriate ways (e.g. cries when sad, smiles/laughs when happy, yells when angry)
- expresses thoughts, ideas, preferences and needs
- focuses on and sustains attention to self-initiated tasks
- pays attention to directions and explanations
- experiments freely with art and other open-ended materials
Standard: Physical
The child:
- demonstrates precision fine motor skills
- uses pencil sharpener, paper clips correctly
- folds paper with some direction and accuracy
- draws / writes with moderate control
- cuts precisely on a line (e.g. on a drawing, pictures out of a magazine)
- performs precise actions involving opposing hand movements (e.g. buttoning, lacing)
- pours liquids into a cup
- demonstrates coordination in large motor movements and pursues physical challenges
- climbs on climbing equipment
- walks up and down stairs alternating feet
- balances for a short time on one foot
- rides tricycle around obstacles
- hops on one foot
- learns familiar songs and is able to move to the beat of music
Developmental
Areas
Spiritual - Through
an environment rich in love and positive guidance,
children will learn to care for the environment,
themselves and those around them, and learn of God's love
for them.
Cognitive -
Children will develop reasoning, logic, and creative
thinking skills through an appropriately challenging
environment, including daily math, science and literacy
experiences. We provide pre-reading and
reading environments.
Social -
Children will learn to interact with their peers as well
as adults in an appropriate and gentle manner. Peer
negotiation and compromise will be encouraged on a daily
basis to help children develop social confidence and
grace.
Emotional -
Children will learn appropriate ways to express and manage
their feelings, through verbal communication, peer support
and a variety of creative outlets.
Language -
Children's language and communication skills will be
developed through daily reading, peer interactions, and
adult initiated conversations.
Physical -
Children will develop large motor skills such as
coordination, balance and agility through a variety of
teacher directed and outdoor free-play activities.
Children's fine motor development such as finger dexterity
and handedness will be developed through a variety of art,
writing and small manipulative activities.
We reserve the
right to refuse service to anyone for any reason.
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