Thursday, March 21, 2013

Thank you for your Support! Co-op’s Spring Fling 2013: Where the Love of Learning Blooms


Co-op’s Spring Fling 2013:
Where the Love of Learning Blooms
  
Sponsors:

Crayon Level: $25
Delaney Health & Fitness
Whimsies & What-Nots

Play-dough Level: $50
The Christmas Mouse
Colonial Cleaning
Llamasburg (Paige & Norman Jacobs)
Williamsburg Neck & Back Center
Eye to Eye (Dr. Matthew Gada)
Laurel & Graham Henshaw
Sam & Hannah Wawersik
Dr. and Mrs. Barton

Cars & Truck Level: $100
Williamsburg Wicker
Edward Jones
Allburn Financial Consulting
J&J Financial (Jamie Vinson)
Mr. & Mrs. McMillan

Circle & Storytime Level: $250
La Tienda
Linda Dessaint (Fine Arts)
Williamsburg Pediatric Dentistry

Arts & Crafts Level: $500
Williamsburg Smiles

Swings & Slides Level: $1,000
Johnny Timbers Tree Service

  
Donations from Businesses:


Yardworks (Ken Butler)
AMF Bowling
Barnes and Noble
Bella Fine Lingerie
Bike Beat  
Body Balance Studio
Disney World
Kingsmill Golf Club
Quirks of Art
School Crossing
Master Park’s Tae Kwon Doe
The Golden Horseshoe
Virginia Living Museum
The Whaling Company
Target
Kingswood Pool
First Colony Pool
Williamsburg Aquatic Club
James City County Recreation Center
Second Street Bistro
Bubbles Hair Salon
Nails Uptown
Hotel El Convento
Focus Field Hockey (Quan Nim)
Stonehouse Stables
Pirates Cove Golf Adventure
Science Museum of Virginia
Pampered Chef (Robin Pardee)
Jolly Eggs (Sonya Hull)
Virginia Zoo
Stensland Dental
AgriBerry
Panera Bread
RB’s Honey
Pinch of Thyme Catering (Marie Homer)
Amy’s Garden
Carter Day’s Canning (Amy Day)
Through the Seasons (Loralee Clark)
Virginia Aquarium
Children’s Museum of Richmond
Paint on Pottery
Boot Camp Mania (Todd Paul)
Wendy Renee Kuhn (French Pastries)
Pure Romance (Kimberly Paulk)
Disney World
Wild Birds Unlimited
Hi Ho Silver
Ken Thompson Photography
Baskin-Robbins, Prince George Street
The Cheese Shop
Bed, Bath & Beyond
The Carousel Children’s Boutique
Old Chickahominy House
Oceans & Ale
Opus 9 Steakhouse
  
In-Kind Sponsors:

Second Street
Colonial Sports
Nathan Lienard (musician)
Event Rentals
Ken Thompson Photography
Cooke’s Gardens
Williamsburg Families
Harmonious Hardscapes
Lisa Iannuzzelli (Graphic Designer)
Kacie McClain
           

Host Families:

Amy & Brian Day
Carol & Wolfgang Wawersik
Sonya & John Hull
Susan & Jim Axtell
Susan & Mike Zickel
Lauri & Matt Wawersik
Amy & Jason Chen
Shannon & Bret Rickert
Kim & Richard Paulk
Laura & Graham Henshaw
Dorothea & Graig Abraham
Reva & Brendan O’Hallaran
Laura & Graham Henshaw
Dorothea & Graig Abraham
Susan & Jim Axtell
Martha & Michael Severin
William Lagergren
Amy & Nat Elliott
Susie & Erika Powell
Geraldine Ferguson
Kveta Benes & Ali Bonyadlou
Molly & Chris Gareis
Kimberly & Bruce Thomas
Betsy Lavin & Ryan Gregory
Quan and Jeff Anderson

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

Does Play Matter

What Did You Play With?
The idea that play can shape the way a child thinks and learns is common in American history. In 17th and 18th century colonial society, play, toys, and games were recognized as vital to a child’s mental and physical development. In the 19th century many children worked on farms and in factories, but still found time to play. The development of kindergartens, increased attendance in public schools, and the introduction of public playgrounds led to new ideas about play and more opportunities for it.

Dolls, games of strategy, vehicles, and construction toys such as the ones you see here have been continual favorites for centuries. But with new technologies in the 20th century--radio, movies, television, and computers--parents and educators wonder whether children are too dependent on passive entertainment and losing the benefits of traditional play. Inventors and historians wonder whether the changes in how we play will change how we invent.


To read more about invention and play visit http://inventionatplay.org/.

Let the Children Play, It's Good for Them!


Smithsonian.com | Science & Nature

Let the Children Play, It's Good for Them!

A leading researcher in the field of cognitive development says when children pretend, they’re not just being silly—they’re doing science

  • By Alison Gopnik
  • Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2012

Walk into any preschool and you’ll find toddling superheroes battling imaginary monsters. We take it for granted that young children play and, especially, pretend. Why do they spend so much time in fantasy worlds?
People have suspected that play helps children learn, but until recently there was little research that showed this or explained why it might be true. In my lab at the University of California at Berkeley, we’ve been trying to explain how very young children can learn so much so quickly, and we’ve developed a new scientific approach to children’s learning.
Where does pretending come in? It relates to what philosophers call “counterfactual” thinking, like Einstein wondering what would happen if a train went at the speed of light.
In one study, my student Daphna Buchsbaum introduced 3- and 4-year-olds to a stuffed monkey and a musical toy and told them, “It’s Monkey’s birthday, and this is a birthday machine we can use to sing to Monkey. It plays “Happy Birthday” when you put a zando” (a funny-looking object) “on it like this.” Then she held up a different object and explained that it wasn’t a zando and therefore wouldn’t make the music play. Then she asked some tricky counterfactual questions: “If this zando wasn’t a zando, would the machine play music or not?” What if the non-zando was a zando? About half the 3-year-olds answered correctly.
Then a confederate took away the toys and Daphna said, “We could just pretend that this box is the machine and that this block is a zando and this other one isn’t. Let’s put the blocks on the machine. What will happen next?” About half said the pretend zando made pretend music, while the pretend non-zando did nothing (well, pretend nothing, which is quite a concept even if you’re older than 3).
We found children who were better at pretending could reason better about counterfactuals—they were better at thinking about different possibilities. And thinking about possibilities plays a crucial role in the latest understanding about how children learn. The idea is that children at play are like pint-sized scientists testing theories. They imagine ways the world could work and predict the pattern of data that would follow if their theories were true, and then compare that pattern with the pattern they actually see. Even toddlers turn out to be smarter than we would have thought if we ask them the right questions in the right way.
Play is under pressure right now, as parents and policymakers try to make preschools more like schools. But pretend play is not only important for kids; it’s a crucial part of what makes all humans so smart.