Our Program >Classes
Bumblebees
To qualify, children must be at least 19 months and no older than 2½ by August 31st. Tuition is $110 / Month. Bumblebees meet every Monday and Wednesday from 9:30 to 11:30 AM.
What do Bumblebees Learn?
The Bumblebees are just beginning to explore their worlds. Through creative play, exposure to music, art and new experiences they quickly learn about their environment and how to interact with other children and adults. Our Bumblebees class emphasizes unstructured play -- giving children the room they need to engage in activities that interest and stimulate them and learn at their own pace. Our teachers and parents help guide them as they explore and learn.
Daily Class Schedule
Kids Enter!
Activities:
  • Wash hands
  • Teacher and working parents help with transitions
  • Children play and greet each other
  • Parents who are leaving, leave by 9:45

Please note: (if your child is not ready, you are welcome to stay for the remainder of the day even if it is not your work day. We welcome the extra set of hands! If you do decide to leave it’s best to do this in a timely manner (by 9:45 ish) as prolonged transitions evoke anxiety in many children. The teacher will be available to help you design a transition plan that feels good to both you and your child)

Classroom Play Time
Activities:
  • gross motor play- push toys, climbing the loft, bouncing, rocking toys, outside slide, gymnastics mats for practicing tumbling, tunnels for crawling through
  • art project—the studio will usually be open for easel painting or a fun craft
  • sensory table—this allows for tactile exploration as well as room for experimenting with basic scientific principles (sink/float, pouring/filling, cause & effect, laws of physics, etc.)
  • playdough—another tactile experience that starts to work not only their imagination, but also their growing fine motor muscles
  • dramatic play—kitchen & props, dress-up capes, building houses or boats out of blocks, pretending to be animals, the list goes on…
  • blocks & building—a toddler feels quite powerful lifting and moving the big hollow blocks we have in our classroom. Their imagination is stretched when we add props to the blocks, placing animals inside block shelters, driving cars into the driveways we just built. We will hear the frequent “timber!” as the “builder” turns “condemner” and watches delightedly as his/her work of art crashes to the floor. After all, the experiment with cause and effect is far more important to the toddler’s development than is the final building product!
  • Playing with Pet Turtle—we frequently take out the turtle and place him in a large tub so that the children can observe and ask questions. We practice touching him with one finger gently.
  • Reading books—Oftentimes a child needs the comfort of a lap and a book and there are always parents or a teacher available to read in the rocker or on the couch.
  • Manipulatives—There will be ample supply of cause and effect toys, in and out toys, building toys, and rolling toys available to explore.
  • Snack—snack is available throughout choice time in the kitchen
Clean up
Parents solicit help from toddlers. Working parents will be making a point to pre-clean so that this final cleaning is not too big.
Circle
Music and movement/ story
Outside time at Lakewood playground
Walk accross the street to the local playground and play on swings, sandbox, and playstructures.
Goodbye Circle (quick song)
Teacher is available to talk to parents as they come pick up their child.

 

 

 

Classes
Bumblebees
19 months - 2½ years
» Learn More

Crickets
2½ - 3½ years
» Learn More

Dragonflies
3½ - 5 years
» Learn More

Teacher Biography
About
Katie Vos

Class Teacher
I have been a teacher for what feels like many years now.  I began with camps and ski school in high school and college, followed with work for a terrific Inclusive Schools Research Project after college.  I returned for my Masters in Teaching at Seattle University, then taught fifth and sixth grade for six years in the Lake Washington School District.  Once my daughter Clio was born, I left the elementary classroom and taught seminars for teachers in the area of math instruction.  Now, with Clio (4-Dragonfly), Romy (2-Bumblebee) in my life, I致e found myself irresistibly drawn into teaching at the preschool level.  The energy and sincerity of the kids is just unbeatable!  I think that much of what I致e learned in teaching older learners transfers well to the preschool classroom;  the planning, individualizing, managing behavior, and much more.  I知 also certain that I have more to learn, and I知 excited to do this among a group of such committed and supportive people.  I hope your expectation will also be that there is room for you to learn among the children, parents, and others that make up this community.

Teaching Philosophy

I believe these preschool years are so critical for children in establishing their norms and expectations about relationships, their sense of self and emotional literacy, and their orientation toward learning.  The first and foremost vehicle for all their learning at preschool should be through simple play.  Whether make-believe or messy, gooey exploration, kids experiences in play and in their interactions surrounding that play make their learning meaningful to them.  My role as teacher, as I see it, is to build relationships with and among the students, and to see that their play is rich and rewarding.  I believe that by making thoughtful, deliberate decisions about classroom activities and conversations, our kids will become more and more skilled as thinkers, problem-solvers, lovers-of-learning, and in their relationships with family and friends.