06/28/2025
I love this. Read. Pause. Think.
Training Wheels Consulting offers a variety of consulting services including individual consultation and staff development trainings.
Teaching is not a static profession. As our society changes, so do the needs of our students. As teachers, we must keep up. After 33 years “in the biz”, I am still learning. While some of the “old ways” still ring true, I enjoy reading the latest research and discovering new materials and methods. However, my favorite thing to do is visit other teachers’ classrooms. I am where I am today because o
06/28/2025
I love this. Read. Pause. Think.
06/28/2025
06/28/2025
I love this. Read it. Pause. Think about it.
02/02/2025
Visit my website to see my latest offering. It is a 1-1.5 hour (your choice) training on team building. We will do 4 fun and engaging team building activities designed to demonstrate the skills needed to be a productive and happy team member.
NEW: Team-Building Staffs and faculties need to be able to work together. "The primary purpose of team building is to foster collaboration, strengthen relationships between team members, build trust, and improve...
08/03/2024
https://www.facebook.com/share/kwAVay5WMo2UDxxA/
Easy trick to ensure the glue bottle gets closed properly!
03/14/2024
What a powerful image! ⭐️⭐️⭐️
02/05/2024
We must model what we want to see. ❤️
01/21/2024
On the topic of process art vs product art.
“Product” art is like— doing a craft. There’s supposed to be a set result and everybody’s is supposed to look a set way. Sometimes I hear arguments for the positive side of product art in terms of teaching children specific fine motor skills; i.e., if everybody has to cut out their project in exactly the same way, then they work on cutting, or things like that. Sure, I can see an argument to be made there. I’m not saying crafts are evil. They’re fine. I loved crafts when I was a kid.
“Process” art is what young children (toddlers, preschoolers, early elementary) are drawn to if they’re not interfered with, though. They aren’t thinking about what the end result will look like when they set out—not if they haven’t been acted upon by an adult or other outside force! They might explore the way colors mix on the paper, they might pretend the pencil is a car zooming around the page, they might try to put stickers on the page and then take them back off to see what happens. They might mix materials in creative ways—stick stickers onto wet paint; squeeze out huge globs of liquid glue; try to color on the liquid glue with markers to see what happens. The focus is on the process.
I honestly find process art perfectly sufficient for learning new fine motor techniques too. Kids, in my experience, have just as much fun (if not more) and learn just as much (if not more) using the scissors to cut out whatever they’re imagining or processing or whatever weird material I’ve set in front of them — leaves from outside, wet noodles, dry noodles, straws, paper scraps — as they do cutting out a set craft material.
“What about waste?” people commonly ask me. “You say that you let kids learn how to glue by just squeezing out glue and not telling them any different, but isn’t that wasteful?”
Play is learning, and learning isn’t wasteful. It’s OK to preemptively only set out what materials you’re OK with them using all of. Put half the bottle of glue away, in a different container, to be returned to the white bottle after you’re done; or put only a bit of it out, in a cup with a paintbrush, or mix it with a bit of water or paint to stretch it, or involve the child in the exploring.
Ask yourself before entering into an art/play exploration: what would I be okay with them literally using one hundred percent of? Only give them access to that much of everything. Kids can be creative within limitations — some of the best art comes from working within boundaries!
[Image description: Six pieces of artwork, each made with what looks like watercolour paint but each one extremely different. One appears to show a butterfly, one shows something like the outline of an elephant, a few look like they have exploration of square-shaped stamps involved, and one looks like an exploration of color mixing. The caption says, “You know you’re doing it right when no two pieces of children’s work look the same.” The image was made by Cuddlebug Kids whose handle is also on the image. End description.]