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Study Guide

Overview and Test Objectives
Field 134: Early Childhood General and Special Education (Birth–K)

Test Overview

Table outlining the test format, number of questions, time, and passing score.
Format Computer-based test (CBT)
Number of Questions 150 multiple-choice questions
Time 3 hours and 45 minutes*

*Does not include 15-minute CBT tutorial

Test Objectives

Table outlining test content and subject weighting by sub area and objective.
Subarea Range of Objectives Approximate Percentage of Questions on Test
1 Foundations of Early Childhood Education 001–005 20 percent
2 Whole Child Development 006–009 20 percent
3 Special Education and Support for All Children and Families 010–012 20 percent
4 Infant and Toddler Content and Pedagogy 013–015 20 percent
5 Literacy, Mathematics, Science, and Social Development (Ages 3–6) 016–020 20 percent

Hover over each subarea for details of subtest content or see table above.

Sub area 1 20%, Sub area 2 20%, Sub area 3 20%, Sub area 4 20%, and Sub area 5 20%.

Subarea 1—Foundations of Early Childhood Education

Objective 001—Teaching and Learning

Includes:

Objective 002—Observation, Documentation, Assessments

Includes:

Objective 003—Culturally Responsive Education

Includes:

Objective 004—Relationships, Interactions, and Guidance

Includes:

Objective 005—Professionalism

Includes:

 

Subarea 2—Whole Child Development

Objective 006—General Knowledge

Includes:

Objective 007—Influences on Development

Includes:

Objective 008—The Role of Play

Includes:

Objective 009—Social-Emotional Development

Includes:

 

Subarea 3—Special Education and Support for All Children and Families

Objective 010—Relationships that Provide Support for All Children and Families

Includes:

Objective 011—Learning Environments that Support All Children

Includes:

Objective 012—Individualized Family Service Plan (I F S P) and Individualized Education Program (I E P)

Includes:

 

Subarea 4—Infant and Toddler Content and Pedagogy

Objective 013—General Considerations in Infant and Toddler Content and Pedagogy

Includes:

Objective 014—Supporting Cognitive Development

Includes:

Objective 015—Supporting Language and Literacy Development

Includes:

 

Subarea 5—Literacy, Mathematics, Science, and Social Development (Ages 3–6)

Objective 016—Language and Emergent Literacy: Literacy Learning Environments, Culturally Responsive Practices in Literacy, and Literacy Curriculum Design and Assessment

Includes:

Objective 017—Components of Literacy

Demonstrate an understanding of content knowledge and pedagogy related to each component of literacy, including: 1) what the components of literacy are, 2) how each develops, 3) how to assess them, and 4) how to teach them. The components include:

Objective 018—Mathematics: Mathematics-Specific Teaching Practices and Strategic Tasks of Mathematics Teaching

Includes understanding ways to:

Objective 019—Science: Science Pedagogical Content Knowledge

Demonstrate understanding of the content knowledge and pedagogy in order to teach science to children across the grade band, differentiated accordingly, including:

Objective 020—Social Development and Studies: Pedagogical Content Knowledge of Social Development and Social Studies

Demonstrate understanding of the content knowledge and pedagogy in order to teach social development and social studies to children across the grade band, differentiated accordingly, including:

 


Excerpts from MTTC Standards for the Preparation of Teachers of Early Childhood General and Special Education (Birth-Kindergarten)1

Literacy

L.4. Overall Literacy

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. What it is: Teaching candidates will learn that literacy processes—reading, writing, speaking, listening, viewing, and visually representing—are inherently connected, and the constructs of literacy are related in complex ways.
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn that all of the constructs of literacy are integrated in the service of meaningful communication and literacy learning that all constructs can and should be developed throughout early childhood educational experiences.
  3. How to assess it: Teacher candidates will learn that assessment of individual constructs of literacy identified in these standards can be valuable, but also valuable, and essential, is the understanding and ability to administer and interpret the results of multiple informal and formal assessments that examine the processes of language and literacy in their entirety; that it is important to understand that a child's assessed literacy skills will vary depending upon a number of factors, including background knowledge related to the topic of a particular text, motivation and engagement at that point in time, and features of the literacy task—thus should be seen as an approximation to inform instructional decision-making, not a definitive judgment or a label; that children may exhibit difficulties within and/or across the many constructs of literacy, and, if warranted, that the teacher should seek assessment and/or instructional support from a specialist, which will vary depending on the type of difficulty.
  4. How to teach it: Cognizant of each child's experiences, strengths, needs, and interests, well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to select and use research-supported instructional techniques that address multiple constructs of literacy development simultaneously (e.g., a single practice could address phonological awareness, concepts of print, and composition), such as, but not limited to, supporting families with strategies to encourage language development and early literacy in the home; literacy-enriched dramatic play, storytelling/story acting, interactive read-aloud, shared reading, interactive writing, and discussion of ideas with print and digital texts across disciplines.
L.5. Motivation and Engagement

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. What it is: Teacher candidates will learn that literacy engagement and motivation begins at birth and refers to the beliefs, values, goals, and dispositions that provide energy and direction for behaviors and thoughts of the individual related to literacy.
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn that literacy engagement and motivation develops through interactions of the child with family, friends, teachers, and community members, combined with experiences in various activities in which the child observes and internalizes the literacy engagements, motivations, and knowledge of significant others and learns from important experiences and understand that pressuring young children to read or participate in rote practice of isolated components of reading can lead to bad reading habits and undermine their motivation to read.
  3. How to assess it: Well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to assess literacy motivation and engagement through interviews or questionnaires with the child, which may be supplemented by teacher observation of child affect and actions, that reveals effort, persistence, care, commitment, and accomplishment.
  4. How to teach it: Cognizant of each child's experiences, strengths, needs, and interests, well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to select and use research-supported instructional practices to foster intrinsic literacy motivation and engagement, including: setting expectations for classroom participation; providing comfortable spaces for literacy (i.e., sitting together with children, letting them sit on your lap and next to you while sharing books); building interpersonal relationships with children that encourage mutual trust and commitment; assuring opportunities for developing self-efficacy through scaffolding, text and task selection, differentiation, goal-setting and self-monitoring; offering children substantive options, choices, and input into book selection, including repetition of favorite books, and learning activities; arranging collaborative activities that foster literacy learning through social interactions; providing a variety of meaningful purposes for academic units and tasks; providing continual encouragement for academic and personal attainment and interests; and emphasizing the utility, value, and enjoyment of literacy and literacy tasks.
L.6. Print Concepts
  1. What it is: Teacher candidates will learn that print concepts, or concepts of print, are foundational knowledge about how print, in general, and how books "work," such as understanding that print carries meaning, that print is authored, and that print is permanent; that graphics and print relate; and that print is made up of graphemes, which are associated with phonemes (alphabetic principle), and includes, but is not limited to, directionality of print, knowledge of parts of texts (e.g., title, author, table of contents, diagrams).
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn that concepts of print develop through observation, through interactions with others around print, and through explicit instruction. Note that some of these concepts are language-specific, not universal (e.g., English and Arabic have different directionality).
  3. How to assess it: Well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to use screening tools/assessments and to use diagnostic assessment tools to engage children in demonstrating the concepts of print as they engage with texts independently, with peers, and with teachers, to inform instruction in print concepts.
  4. How to teach it: Cognizant of each child's experiences, strengths, needs, and interests, well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to select and use research-supported instructional techniques to develop concepts of print, such as encouraging children to touch and hold books and turn pages, print-referencing read-alouds, interactive writing, finger-pointing for print to speech match, literacy-enriched dramatic play, and other forums for modelling and explicit instruction.
L.7. Phonological Awareness
  1. What it is: Teacher candidates will learn that phonological awareness is a set of foundational oral and aural language skills that involve conscious awareness of sounds within the speech stream, and the segmentation and blending of sounds; the difference between phonological awareness and the related terms phonology, phonics, and phonemic awareness; why phonological awareness, particularly phonemic awareness, is important for development of concepts of print, decoding, and encoding; and its foundational and reciprocal relationships with word reading, spelling, and vocabulary.
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn the common developmental progression of phonological awareness skills, including multiple levels of sounds within words (e.g., syllables, rhymes, onset, rime, initial sounds, and other phonemes), expectations by age level, and the differences among various phonological manipulations, including producing, identifying, matching, blending, segmenting, deleting, and substituting sounds.
  3. How to assess it: Well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to use screening and diagnostic tools and to inform instruction in phonological awareness, and if needed to seek assessment and/or instructional support from a specialist.
  4. How to teach it: Cognizant of each child's experiences, strengths, needs, and interests, well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to select and implement research-supported instructional techniques that foster children's phonological awareness development, including babbling and sound production/mimicking, encouraging and responding to all sounds, from first coos; use infant-directed speech, listening and distinguishing between sounds, particularly phonemic segmenting, blending, and manipulation, by providing explicit instruction, modeling, and scaffolding, fostering awareness of articulatory features, stretching words, playing with sounds and words (e.g., alliteration), singing, sorting words by sounds, encouraging invented or estimated spelling (which also involves phonics), and multimodal and/or multisensory activities with letters (which also involves phonics). Phonological awareness terms (e.g., rhyming, alliteration, syllables) should be used in instruction with children.
L.8. Phonics
  1. What it is: Teacher candidates will learn that phonics is a connection between individual and groups of graphemes (letter symbols) and phonemes (letter sounds) that, among other things, allows readers to translate written symbols into meaningful words (decoding); the related terms consonant, vowel, hard c/g, soft c/g, r-controlled vowel, blend, digraph, diphthong, types of syllables, and schwa; to accurately analyze any English word for each of its letter-sound relationships; and the problems with phonics generalizations that are too broad to be accurate (e.g., “when two vowels go walking the first one does the talking,” which actually applies less than half the time).
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn that children generally begin by learning the name, sound(s), and uppercase and lowercase forms of individual letters, followed by learning more complex letter-sound relationships (see Michigan K standards), relying in part on a base of phonological awareness skills and developing reciprocally with those skills.
  3. How to assess it: Well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to use observation to inform instruction, cognizant of the language(s) and dialect(s) spoken by the child, including assessments of alphabet knowledge and knowledge of more complex letter-sound relationships, and if warranted seek assessment and/or instructional support from a literacy specialist.
  4. How to teach it: Cognizant of each child's experiences, strengths, needs, and interests, well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to select and use engaging and multimodal research-supported instructional techniques to explicitly teach, model, provide guided practice with, and provide independent practice with letter-sound relationships using texts that are consistent with the child's knowledge of phonics, with synthesis, analysis, and manipulations of graphemes and morphemes within and across words, with emphasis on application in meaningful reading and writing (see Word Recognition for additional expectations), keeping in mind adaptations of instruction for children with needs in working memory and executive functioning skills, such as attention and processing speed.
L.9. Letter Knowledge and Spelling
  1. What it is: Teacher candidates will learn that the purpose of early writing is communication and includes skills for composing, spelling, and handwriting and that letter knowledge includes the letter name, sound(s), and form of each letter including uppercase and lowercase letters. Spelling is a connection between individual and groups of phonemes (letter sounds) and graphemes (letter symbols) and morphemes (meaning units) that, among other things, allows readers to translate thoughts into written words (encoding); spelling using the sounds children hear in words rather than conventional rules, is developmentally appropriate and demonstrates children's understanding of letter-sound relationships; the related terms consonant, vowel, hard c/g, soft c/g, r-controlled vowel, blend, digraph, diphthong, types of syllables, and schwa; that spelling instruction enables writing and also improves the specific reading skills of decoding and word reading and whose influences include phonological awareness, orthographic knowledge, and morphological awareness.
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn that spelling develops through a series of common, yet not rigid, stages, with phases within each stage; stages are variously named, for example drawing as writing, scribbling, letter-like forms, random letters, estimated/phonemic spelling, and conventional spelling (not expected until later); spelling development relies particularly on developing phonological awareness, phonics knowledge, and vocabulary knowledge.
  3. How to assess it: Well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to use observation, work samples, screening tools and diagnostic assessments to inform instruction, cognizant of the language(s) and dialect(s) spoken by the child, including assessments of alphabet knowledge; stage of spelling/writing development; and spelling performance within meaningful writing, recognizing that spelling performance may reveal information about children's grapheme awareness, phonemic awareness, phonics, and vocabulary knowledge, and, if warranted by difficulties, to seek assessment and/or instructional support from a specialist, whose knowledge base includes, but is not limited to, knowledge of dyslexia.
  4. How to teach it: Cognizant of each child's experiences, strengths, needs, and interests, well-prepared beginning teachers of literacy will learn and be able to select and use engaging and multimodal research-supported instructional techniques including practices that simultaneously address both phonics and spelling, explicitly teaching, modeling, providing guided, and independent practice with, and providing feedback regarding, letter-sound relationships and spelling strategies; encouraging writing using any form (e.g., drawing, scribbling); encouraging estimated spelling when appropriate; and providing opportunities for fluent application in meaningful writing, in all cases, keeping in mind adaptations of instruction for children with needs in working memory and executive functioning skills, such as attention and processing speed.
L.10. Letters & Words Recognition
  1. What it is: Teacher candidates will learn that letter knowledge includes the letter name, sound(s), and form of each letter including uppercase and lowercase letters and that word recognition is the ability to translate written words into known words within the lexicon; words may be recognized based on decoding, prediction (for example, through initial letters, syntactic context, and semantic context), analogy, and sight; the ultimate goal is to read each word at sight, meaning automatically, but in order to attain this goal with large numbers of words, each word must be fully analyzed graphophonemically and morphophonemically; this applies to all words, including high- as well as low-frequency words and words that are not spelled as might be expected; the related terms include high-frequency word, sight word, and decodable.
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn that alphabet knowledge and word recognition develops through experience with letters and words and instruction through a series of common, yet not rigid, stages in overlapping waves, for example in Ehri's (2014) terms, from understanding that print has meaning, that letters are separate forms that represent sound and can be combined to create meaning, pre-alphabetic to partial alphabetic, to full alphabetic, to consolidated alphabetic, relying particularly on developing an understanding that print has meaning, that letters are separate, unchanging forms that represent sounds, phonological and orthographic awareness, phonics knowledge, vocabulary knowledge, and constructing and monitoring for meaning while engaging in reading experiences with adults.
  3. How to assess it: Well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to use screening tools and diagnostic assessments to inform instruction, including letter-name and letter-sound knowledge, high-frequency words, and word reading in context, and seek assessment and/or instructional support from a literacy specialist.
  4. How to teach it: Cognizant of each child's experiences, strengths, needs, and interests, well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to select and use engaging and multimodal research-supported instructional techniques to explicitly teach, model, provide guided practice with, and provide independent practice with letter knowledge, phonology, and word recognition strategies.
L.14. Vocabulary
  1. What it is: Teacher candidates will learn that vocabulary is an oral and written language construct that is central to everyday and academic language and involves general and discipline-specific vocabulary; knowledge of word meanings and the conceptual knowledge that underlies them; it includes understanding multiple meanings across contexts, figurative language, and morphological structure of words; and it is central to oral language, academic language, reading comprehension, and written composition.
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn that vocabulary develops through oral and written language exposure, inquiry, experiences, and explicit and implicit instruction (including explicit instruction in word meanings, vocabulary strategies [e.g., looking for a possible synonym in the sentence], and deliberate analysis of the morphemic composition of words), with particular complexity for children whose home language is not the language of instruction.
  3. How to assess it: Well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to examine children's breadth and depth of vocabulary knowledge, recognizing that children may have knowledge of vocabulary not in the language of instruction, and learning through use of observational checklists and rubrics for oral and written language samples, assessments of vocabulary that have been taught, and, if warranted by difficulties, to seek assessment and/or instructional support from a specialist.
  4. How to teach it: Cognizant of each child's experiences, strengths, needs, and interests, well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to select and use research-supported instructional techniques to develop vocabulary, including for children whose home language is not the language of instruction, through a large volume of oral and written language exposure (e.g., through behavioral reflections, paraphrase reflections, conversation, read-alouds, audiobooks, and inquiry); selecting appropriate words for instruction; providing accessible, explicit explanation of the meaning of words, including, as appropriate, examples and non-examples, visual supports such as video, photo, or props, movement, analogies, and other comparisons; producing the word for children orally; having children repeat the word; providing opportunities for children to use the word in multiple contexts; providing a visual representation of the word; and other techniques.
L.15. Handwriting
  1. What it is: Teacher candidates will learn that the purpose of early writing is communication and thus, writing includes skills for composing, spelling, and handwriting and that handwriting is formation of letters in written text by hand, the fluency of which affects written composition quality for older children. Handwriting is dependent on strong fine motor development of the hands and fingers and letter knowledge. Handwriting is just one part of writing.
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn that handwriting develops in the context of graphomotor development more broadly and through a series of common, yet not rigid, stages including drawing, scribbling, linear scribbles, letter-like formations, and conventional letters. Testing of letter formations (e.g., letter reversals, letter-like forms), pencil grips, and handedness is common throughout this grade band.
  3. How to assess it: Well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to assess handwriting through observation, the use of rubrics, and, if warranted, seek formal assessments administered by a specialist (e.g., occupational therapist).
  4. How to teach it: Well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to select and use research-supported instructional materials and techniques to develop handwriting (e.g., providing a range of writing/drawing tools for use), including gross and fine motor muscle development, pencil grip and letter formation, through opportunities to exercise and build hand and finger strength (e.g., manipulating play dough, using tweezers), modeling, teaching explicitly, in a multisensory manner, and providing meaningful opportunities to apply letter-formation learning to authentic, communicative contexts and play.
L.16. Comprehension
  1. What it is: Teacher candidates will learn that comprehension is the ability to extract and construct meaning through interaction and involvement with oral, written, and visual language separately or in combination and the ultimate purpose of reading instruction.
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn that comprehension of oral, print, and digital texts develops through the integration of many areas including language development, world knowledge development, and, in the case of written language, written textual knowledge, comprehension strategies, metacognition, and attitudes specific to written and visual language, and working memory and executive functioning skills.
  3. How to assess it: Well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to assess reading comprehension through tasks including questioning, retelling, dialogic conversations, summarizing, and application tasks (e.g., carrying out a procedure while reading/listening to a procedural text) that, collectively, involve the three categories of comprehension: locate and recall, integrate and interpret, and critique and evaluate; if warranted by difficulties, to seek assessment and/or instructional support from an appropriate specialist.
  4. How to teach it: Cognizant of each child's experiences, strengths, needs, and interests, well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to select and use research-supported instructional techniques to develop comprehension, including: making book-sharing interactive through various interpersonal strategies; to select and analyze texts for their affordances and challenges, including for specific disciplinary contexts; provide daily time for children to use language, hear stories, and look at books in motivating and engaging contexts for the purposes of building disciplinary knowledge and/or advancing personal interests; provide multiple opportunities to demonstrate their receptive language in meaningful ways (e.g., following verbal guidance for one-step then multistep directions, games that exercise receptive language such as lotto/simon-says); comprehension strategy instruction; modeling and guiding children to be metacognitive while reading; focused, high-quality discussion of the meanings of text; text structure and feature instruction; and application tasks (e.g., building an argument from textual evidence) that, collectively, involve the three categories of comprehension: locate and recall, integrate and interpret, and critique and evaluate.
L.17. Early Writing Composition
  1. What it is: Teacher candidates will learn that composition is the process of conveying meaning through oral, written (print or digital), or visual language separately or in combination in many types of text and that the purpose of early writing is communication and includes skills for composing, spelling, and handwriting (e.g., label, list, map, opinion, informative/explanatory, narrative) and is important to active citizenship, many professions, and daily life; and requires applications of writing conventions to construct clear and coherent writing in which the development, organization, and style are appropriate for specific tasks, purposes, and audiences across disciplines.
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn that written composition develops through a series of common, yet not rigid, stages. Development includes fine motor development through opportunities that build small muscle groups in hands and fingers such as working with play dough, finger painting, with hands and then tools, writing through drawing, writing through scribbling, writing through letter-like forms, writing through letter strings, writing through estimated/phonemic spelling, and eventually writing through conventional spelling, in a manner that may vary across disciplines, genres, and modes of communication, and may be influenced by a child's home language(s) or dialect(s), and integrates many areas including language development (e.g., morphological knowledge and awareness, vocabulary depth and breadth), world knowledge, textual knowledge, and knowledge of composition strategies, self-regulation, working memory and attitudes specific to written and visual language; not all composition difficulties have the same cause nor require the same instructional responses.
  3. How to assess it: Assess early composition (the effectiveness of a specific piece of writing for a specific purpose and audience), through observation, checklists, rubrics, and other tools and to use intermediary outcomes toward overall quality of a composition, including writing output, mechanics, vocabulary, sentence structure, organization, ideation, voice, and genre (or text) elements and, if warranted, seek assessment and/or instructional support from an appropriate specialist.
  4. How to teach it: Cognizant of each child's experiences, strengths, needs, and interests, well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to select and use research-supported instructional techniques to develop written composition abilities including providing a variety of writing materials across learning spaces; integrating meaningful writing opportunities into play experiences (e.g., sign in at clinic, fill in an order form at the flower shop) and routines (e.g., sign in for attendance, check mark toileting); teachers' modeling writing and instruction in the writing process (i.e., why we write, how authors select ideas/words); take dictation of children's compositions/idea generation and articulate that you are writing their words; engage in interactive writing with children (PK and kindergarten); daily time for children to write across domains in motivating and engaging contexts; instruction in writing processes and strategies, particularly those involving researching, planning, revising, and editing writing in print and digital contexts; opportunities to study models and non-models of writing and write a variety of texts for a variety of purposes and audiences, with scaffolding. Opportunities for early keyboarding is included.
L.18. Speaking and Listening
  1. What it is: Teacher candidates will learn that speaking and listening are oral language constructs that are central to everyday and academic language general and discipline-specific conversations including semantics (how meaning is portrayed through words and signs), form including phonology (sounds), morphology (meaning), and syntax (grammar; formulation of sentences); features such as intonation, stress, and pause; and use of language including the function (interpersonal and intrapersonal) and context. In addition, components such as gesture, turn-taking, production, and comprehension/reception are all part of language development.
  2. How it develops: Teacher candidates will learn that speaking and listening develop through oral language exposure, accompanying gestures with words, modeling gestures to support basic needs (eat, sleep, more, etc.); culturally responsive experiences, inquiry, scaffolded guidance, and explicit and implicit instruction (vocabulary, social interactions).
  3. How to assess it: Well-prepared beginning teachers will learn and be able to examine children's speaking and listening knowledge and skills, ensure that infants' and toddlers' hearing is screened regularly, use observational checklists and rubrics for oral language samples, narrative assessments, and assessments through play experiences, and, if warranted, to seek assessment and/or instructional support from a specialist.
  4. How to teach it: Cognizant of each child's experiences, strengths, needs, and interests, well-prepared beginning teachers of literacy will learn and be able to select and use research-supported instructional techniques to develop speaking and listening, including for children whose home language is not the language of instruction, through a large volume of oral language exposure (e.g., through conversation, recasting, singing, finger plays, listening games, read-alouds, audiobooks, play, and inquiry); establishing joint attention; parallel talk; anticipatory talk; imitating and expanding; use of a calm, warm tone of voice; modeling positive anti-bias language; providing specific praise and verbally labeling children's behavior (behavioral reflection/paraphrase reflection); including toys/materials/props in play spaces to encourage children's use of language; providing opportunities during routines for children to use language (e.g., encourage social conversations during meal times, talking with children during diapering/toileting); providing opportunities for children to use language in multiple contexts and with multiple communication partners; selecting appropriate words for vocabulary instruction and providing multiple exposures to target words across contexts; providing accessible, explicit explanation for the use of language for multiple purposes (e.g., social, academic, negotiation) and across multiple contexts; encourage children to use language for requests, needs, and wants; encourage children to use language to negotiate socially; and other techniques; encouraging children to use communication through gestures, signs, oral language, Augmentative and Alternative Communication devices including technologically mediated supports.

 

Mathematics

M.1. Build and draw on relationships with children, caregivers, and communities in ways that support children's mathematics learning.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Hear children's mathematical thinking and engage with curiosity, interest, and understanding in ways that build rapport; provide information about children's interests, strengths, and needs; and inform instruction.
  2. Communicate with caregivers about mathematics and their child in relation to current standards and the school's curriculum, supporting caregivers in fostering their child's success with mathematics in and out of school.
  3. Use knowledge of children, their caregivers, and their communities to create mathematical learning environments that provide children, in particular children historically marginalized in mathematics classrooms, with access to significant mathematics and engagement in mathematical activities that are both culturally and instructionally appropriate.
  4. Attend to and build children's positive mathematical identities, disrupting patterns of marginalization that reinforce inequities and exclusion.
M.2. Plan mathematics learning.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Consider who children are as learners of mathematics and design ways to interest children and to use their resources and affinities to build access and participation, including taking stock of the mathematical capacities children bring to lessons, anticipating common patterns of mathematical thinking, looking for opportunities to include play in mathematics and mathematics in play, and planning for the mathematical participation of particular children.
  2. Analyze the mathematics content in instructional resources, referencing standards and progression documents to clarify learning goals and to identify connections among mathematical concepts and across developmental levels.
  3. Solicit broad participation in mathematical work (for instance, by choosing activities and planning learning experiences that provide children with multiple entry points and ways of being successful), make children's thinking central to the lesson, provide opportunities for play, and give children opportunities to show their thinking and see value in the contributions they make.
M.3. Use formative and summative mathematics assessments to gauge children's learning and to make instructional decisions.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Elicit children's thinking and solution strategies in multiple forms in writing, through speaking, in drawings, etc. Identify evidence of understanding in children's thinking and strategies and use this information to make in-the-moment instructional decisions.
  2. Understand the meanings and purposes of summative assessment and the process of formative assessment in mathematics. Interpret the results of assessments and use the interpretations in ways that respond to children's needs, promote learning, and improve instruction.
  3. Consider the language, format, and context of mathematics assessments (and assessment questions) for demonstrating children's thinking and consider how formative and summative mathematics assessments are used and the consequences for children, both intended and unintended.
  4. Distinguish between superficial and deeper evidence about children and attend to key aspects of children's understanding, skill, and engagement, as well as ignore irrelevant aspects (e.g., recognizing the source of the child's confusion vs. right/wrong). Use assessment data to plan next steps for instruction, understanding that evidence of children's learning (vs. topic coverage) is necessary for moving on from a topic.
M.4. Enact instruction that allows all children to engage with significant mathematics and to develop productive dispositions toward mathematics.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Support children, in particular children historically marginalized in mathematics classrooms, in identifying themselves as mathematical thinkers and design instruction that helps children to recognize their own and other children's mathematical strengths.
  2. Use a variety of participation structures and instructional routines, including whole class, small group, and independent lesson formats, both play and formal instruction, and a variety of materials.
  3. Foster children's talk about mathematics, with particular attention to disrupting patterns of over- and under-participation that reinforce inequities and exclusion.
  4. Develop classroom organizational routines and strategies that allow children access to mathematical tools and ensure the effective use of manipulatives and resources.
  5. Develop strategies for creating a classroom culture that values productive struggle, challenging mathematical ideas, constructing mathematical meanings together, and enjoyment of mathematics.
M.5. Unpack mathematical content and identify mathematical competence for spatial relationships and shapes (Geometry).

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Identify mathematical affordances in tasks and play situations for noticing, naming, and describing attributes of two- and three-dimensional shapes and spatial relationships (e.g., over, under), paying attention to the precision of examples.
  2. Identify opportunities to introduce mathematical language and precision into others' talk and play that draw attention to features, and compositions of shapes and objects, for instance, suggesting words such as tall, short, or wide when someone says, "my building is big" or asking questions about how many blocks or what shapes were used or about which blocks are on the bottom.
  3. Recognize and rewrite mathematical tasks involving spatial reasoning, composing and decomposing shapes, equal partitioning, or comparing or analyzing shapes, including for children of varying abilities.
  4. Generate examples and non-examples of shapes (such as triangles, rectangles, and others) that draw attention to defining features and help to build mathematical definitions, namely examples that fit common expectations and ones that do not.
M.6. Perform mathematical explanations and support children's mathematical explanations for spatial relationships and shapes (Geometry).

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Develop and implement appropriate experiences for young children that facilitate the developing concepts of recognizing and naming shapes, understanding the physical relationship between yourself and other objects, and the relationships between objects.
  2. Unpack, understand, and develop mathematical justifications using definitions when comparing and analyzing two- and three-dimensional shapes, positions, and attributes of objects and phenomena.
  3. Use clear and precise language to name and describe two- and three-dimensional shapes (e.g., distinguishing between cones and triangles, sides and faces, and sides and edges; recognizing changes in orientation; identifying transformations).
M.7. Choose, interpret, and talk with representations using concrete materials in purposeful, relevant activities for spatial relationships and shapes (Geometry).

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Develop and implement appropriate experiences using concrete materials for young children that facilitate the developing concepts of recognizing the relationships that make up events, colors, lines, textures, and sounds; use and encourage others' use of math language related to Spatial Relationships and Shapes (Geometry); choose and display accurate representations of regular and irregular two- and three-dimensional shapes in a variety of orientations that highlight defining and non-defining attributes; positions, and attributes of objects and phenomena.
  2. Coordinate images, talk, and gestures (e.g., pointing) when comparing and analyzing components of composite two- and three-dimensional shapes, positions, and attributes of objects and phenomena.
  3. Generate multiple representations and make connections among different representations for composite shapes, positions, and attributes of objects in drawings and other models (e.g., blocks, building materials, and other manipulatives).
  4. Interpret idiosyncratic representations of two- and three-dimensional shapes, positions, and attributes of objects and phenomena and recognize children's developing geometric/algebraic conceptualizations/mathematical strengths and weaknesses (e.g., noticing the potential for confusion in using a piece of pie to represent a triangle).
  5. Utilize a variety of approaches to assessment for all children including those with a range of abilities.
M.8. Elicit, interpret, support, and extend others' mathematical thinking for spatial relationships and shapes (Geometry).

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Develop and implement appropriate (i.e., concrete) experiences for young children that facilitate the developing concepts of gathering, sorting, classifying, and analyzing information (data) to help make sense of what is happening in the environment.
  2. Encourage creative ideas of problem solving in mathematics using a range of materials (e.g., blocks, tiles).
  3. Pose mathematically appropriate questions to probe and elicit others' thinking about two- and three-dimensional shapes (e.g., including differences among shapes, equally partitioning shapes, and iterating a part to create a whole), positions, and attributes of objects and phenomena.
  4. Interpret, critique, and develop claims about others' thinking, language, and gestures about quantity, positions, shapes, and relationships between two-dimensional and three-dimensional shapes.
  5. Design and implement experiences that include and encourage the learning of children with a range of abilities.
  6. Clarify and accurately record others' mathematical thinking as they compare and analyze two- and three-dimensional shapes, positions, and attributes of objects and phenomena.
M.9. Unpack mathematical content and identify mathematical competence for patterns, relationships, and change (Algebra).

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Identify mathematical affordances in tasks and play situations for noticing, naming, and describing attributes of relationships that make up a pattern and understanding that things change over time, paying attention to the precision of examples.
  2. Identify opportunities to introduce mathematical language and precision into others' talk and play that draw attention to patterns, repetitions of objects, events, colors, lines, texture, sounds, and descriptions of observed changes over time.
  3. Recognize and rewrite mathematical tasks involving identifying and creating patterns, identifying changes in attributes across time.
  4. Generate examples and non-examples of patterns and attributes or events that change over time, namely examples that fit common expectations and ones that do not.
M.10. Perform mathematical explanations and support children's mathematical explanations for patterns, relationships, and change (Algebra).

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Develop and implement appropriate experiences for young children that facilitate the developing concepts of recognizing and naming patterns, relationships between yourself and other objects, and change over time.
  2. Formulate questions that distinguish whether a number or element of a series fits a pattern and whether it changes across time.
  3. Unpack, understand, and develop mathematical justifications using definitions when comparing and analyzing patterns, relations among attributes of objects and phenomena, and how/whether they change over time.
  4. Use clear and precise language to name and describe patterns, relationships between ourselves and other objects, and change over time.
  5. Compare and contrast different explanations of the methods for generating numerical or geometrical patterns and recognizing relations that make up a pattern.
M.11. Choose, interpret, and talk with representations using concrete materials in purposeful, relevant activities for patterns, relationships, and change (Algebra).

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Develop and implement appropriate experiences using concrete materials for young children that facilitate the developing concepts of recognizing the relationships that make up a pattern and/or creating repetitions of objects, events, colors, lines, textures, and sounds; understanding that things change over time and that change can be described with math words.
  2. Use and encourage others' use of math language related to patterns and change (Algebra).
  3. Choose and display accurate representations of patterns, relations between ourselves and other objects, and change over time.
  4. Coordinate images, talk, and gestures such as pointing when comparing and analyzing components of various patterns, attributes of objects and phenomena, and changes over time.
  5. Generate multiple representations and make connections among different representations for composite patterns and attributes of objects in drawings and other models (e.g., blocks, building materials, and other manipulatives) and for examining change over time (e.g., images of the same scene across seasons).
  6. Interpret idiosyncratic representations of patterns and attributes of objects and phenomena and recognize children's developing algebraic conceptualizations including strengths and weaknesses (e.g., noticing the potential for confusion in using a mix of real and cartoon images to all represent the same object within a pattern).
  7. Utilize a variety of approaches to assessment for all children including those with a range of abilities.
M.12. Elicit, interpret, support, and extend others' mathematical thinking for patterns, relationships, and change (Algebra).

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Develop and implement appropriate experiences for young children that facilitate the developing concepts of patterning, relations between themselves and objects, and change over time.
  2. Pose mathematically appropriate questions to probe and elicit others' thinking about patterns, and relations among objects and phenomena, and change over time.
  3. Interpret, critique, and develop claims about others' thinking, language, and gestures about patterns, relations between objects and phenomena, and change over time.
  4. Design and implement experiences that include and encourage the learning of children with a range of abilities.
  5. Clarify and accurately record others' mathematical thinking as they compare and analyze patterns, attributes of objects and phenomena, and how they change over time.
M.13. Unpack mathematical content and identify mathematical competence for numbers and operations.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Identify mathematical opportunities in tasks and play situations for counting objects, sorting objects and exploring early number concepts (i.e., cardinality, one-to-one correspondence, subitizing, hierarchical inclusion, and conservation, as well as counting on and counting back).
  2. Formulate questions about quantity based on correct or incorrect responses in order to develop or assess thinking around early number concepts when engaging with a set of objects (e.g., more/less, equality).
  3. Analyze addition and subtraction tasks for opportunities to address ideas about number, including composing and decomposing, anchor numbers of 5 and 10, and counting all and counting on, and adapt tasks, if necessary, for specific instructional goals.
  4. Identify the mathematical goals, conditions, and challenges of tasks and play situations designed to address beginning place value relationships.
  5. Recognize multiple strategies for composing and decomposing numbers.
M.14. Perform mathematical explanations and support children's mathematical explanations for numbers and operations.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Develop and implement appropriate experiences for young children that facilitate the concept of number operations such as quantity, order, ways of representing numbers, one-to-one correspondence, and counting (including addition and subtraction).
  2. Use and encourage others' use of math language related to numbers, counting, and operations (e.g., more/less, equality, first/last).
  3. Formulate questions to uncover others' strategies for determining if a count is correct, such as counting on, counting all, or counting back, as objects are added, removed, or combined; or using understandings of the base-ten structure.
  4. Perform clear mathematical explanations connecting new terminology to objects and coordinating different strategies of composing and decomposing, (e.g., part or part/whole). Generate multiple explanations for counts, quantities (e.g., more/less) and for addition and subtraction based on base-ten number representation, 5s and 10s, convenient decompositions, and counting on or back.
M.15. Choose, interpret, and talk with representations for numbers and operations.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Identify affordances and limitations of representations for iterating units and composing and decomposing numbers.
  2. Identify affordances and limitations of different representations (e.g., materials, manipulatives, drawings, and symbols) for base-ten numbers, quantities, addition, and subtraction (e.g., groupable, ungroupable, non-proportional, etc.) in relation to tasks or play situations and pedagogical goals.
  3. Accurately interpret and represent connections and mathematical progressions among representations of numbers, quantities, addition, and subtraction (e.g., open number lines, arrays, etc.).
  4. Utilize a variety of approaches to assessment of numbers and operations for all children including those with a range of abilities.
M.16. Elicit, interpret, support, and extend others' mathematical thinking for numbers and operations.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Pose questions to elicit particular ways of thinking about composing and decomposing numbers both less than 10 and greater than 10 when thinking is not transparent.
  2. Formulate claims about others' mathematical understanding of counting based on evidence from their performance on counting activities, in particular understandings of quantity, one-to-one correspondence, and the ability to count on and back.
  3. Observe, assess, and record developing understandings of early number concepts (i.e., cardinality, one-to-one correspondence, subitizing, hierarchical inclusion, and conservation, as well as counting on and counting back, addition, subtraction) and formulate appropriate follow-up questions.
  4. Design and implement experiences that include and encourage the learning of children with a range of abilities.
M.17. Unpack mathematical content and identify mathematical competence for measurement.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Recognize and articulate potential goals, environments, learning experiences, and play situations which promote children to measure attributes of multiple objects and phenomena using a variety of language and objects. Measurement includes size, weight, quantity, length, volume, and time.
  2. Identify questions that can be asked regarding measurement and comparison of measures of a variety of objects and phenomena and how measurements can change over time.
  3. Provide a narrative of the mathematical work to be done to measure a variety of attributes of various objects and phenomena, including why we measure. Quantifying a measure helps us describe or compare more precisely.
  4. Recognize, analyze, and generate differences in the approaches to measurement.
M.18. Perform mathematical explanations and support children's mathematical explanations for measurement.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Explain and encourage others to explain purposes, approaches, and tools/materials for measurement.
  2. Use and encourage others to use math language reflective of measurement of multiple attributes of object and phenomena including size, quantity, weight, length, and time (e.g., you took a long nap today).
  3. Explain and encourage others' explanations of what is similar and different for attributes of objects and phenomena using measures of size, weight, volume, quantity, length, and/or time; explaining that quantifying a measurement helps us describe and compare more precisely.
  4. Perform explicit and elaborated explanations that unpack the structure of and approaches to measurement.
  5. Interpret and contrast alternative or novel approaches to measurement.
M.19. Choose, interpret, and talk with representations for measurement.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Recognize whether or not measurement approaches are consistent with specific meanings of measurement.
  2. Describe affordances and limitations of different approaches to measurement of objects and phenomena (e.g., we can use yarn to measure something round, but cars to measure something flat).
  3. Choose and use multiple materials/tools and meaningful approaches, including within children's play, to measure a variety of attributes of objects and phenomena within and outside of the classroom.
  4. Use and encourage others to use multiple approaches and materials to record measurements.
  5. Clarify and accurately record others' mathematical thinking as they measure a variety of objects and phenomena.
  6. Utilize a variety of approaches to assessment for all children including those with a range of abilities.
M.20. Elicit, interpret, support, and extend others' mathematical thinking for measurement.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Formulate claims and encourage others to formulate claims about measurement, comparisons of measures, and how measurements might change over time.
  2. Recognize which among a set of partially expressed ideas about measurement is most germane to a given task, such as best tools/materials, approaches, ways of recording, and comparisons.
  3. Clarify and record others' approaches to measurement.
  4. Examine the meaning of measurements and methods for solving measurement tasks as exemplified in others' talk or work, and then apply the approach on different tasks.
  5. Design and implement experiences that include and encourage the learning of children with a range of abilities.
M.21. Unpack mathematical content and identify mathematical competence for collecting, representing, using and organizing information (Data Analysis).

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Identify mathematical affordances in tasks and play situations for noticing, naming, and describing attributes of gathering data and understanding the purpose of collecting data is to answer questions when the answers are not immediately obvious.
  2. Identify opportunities to introduce mathematical language and precision into others' talk and play that describes, compares, and draws conclusions about data as a whole or in part.
  3. Recognize and introduce mathematical language that describes the organization of data, how data must be presented to allow for interpretation and how data are gathered and organized depends on the question. For example: Sort real objects; organize pictures, counters, or name cards; tally charts can help to see clusters of data while a bar graph is a way to compare quantities across categories.
  4. Recognizing and using mathematical language to collect and organize information by helping make sense of the environment by gathering, sorting, classifying, and analyzing information.
M.22. Perform mathematical explanations and support children's mathematical explanations for collecting, representing, using, and organizing information (Data Analysis).

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Develop and implement appropriate experiences for young children that facilitate the developing concepts of gathering data and understanding the purpose of collecting data.
  2. Formulate questions that determine what data should be gathered, how the data is organized and/or how the data is described. Unpack, understand, and develop mathematical justifications for the purpose of data collection and the useful comparison of the parts of data.
  3. Use clear and precise language to understand the purpose of collecting and analyzing data, understanding that the need or purpose of gathering data often comes naturally in the course of discussion or from other content areas such as social studies.
  4. Compare and contrast different explanations of the methods for data collection, analysis, and interpretations.
M.23. Choose, interpret, and talk with representations using concrete materials in purposeful, relevant activities for collecting, representing, using, and organizing information (Data Analysis).

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Develop and implement appropriate experiences using concrete materials for young children that facilitate the developing concepts of gathering data and understanding the purpose of collecting data.
  2. Use and encourage others' use of math language related to what data should be gathered, how the data is organized, and/or how the data is described/interpreted. Choose and display accurate representations related to what data should be gathered, how the data is organized and displayed, and/or how the data is described/interpreted. Coordinate images, talk, and gestures to describe the organization of data, how data are gathered, and how data must be presented to allow for interpretation.
  3. Utilize a variety of approaches to assessment for all children, including those with a range of abilities.
M.24. Elicit, interpret, support, and extend others' mathematical thinking for collecting, representing, using, and organizing information (Data Analysis).

Well-prepared beginning teachers of mathematics will:

  1. Develop and implement appropriate experiences (throughout the day and during play) for young children that facilitate the developing concepts of gathering data and understanding the purpose of gathering data is to answer questions when the answer is not immediately obvious. Pose mathematically appropriate questions to probe and elicit others' thinking about comparing or drawing conclusions about the data in whole or in part. Interpret, critique, and develop claims about others' thinking, language, and gestures about the need or purpose for gathering data, how to unpack and understand the purpose of data collection, and the useful comparison to the parts of data. Clarify and accurately record others' mathematical thinking as they compare and analyze attributes of the methods for data collection, analysis and interpretations.
  2. Design and implement experiences that include and encourage the learning of children with a range of abilities.

 

Science

S.1. Scientific Phenomena

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Articulate the role of scientific phenomena in three-dimensional science teaching and learning.
  2. Identify, evaluate, and use productive scientific phenomena for children's science learning, including everyday noticings of the world (for example, a puddle disappearing over time).
S.2. Engaging Children in Science and Engineering Practices (S E Pees)

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Articulate the nature and importance of scientific and engineering practices, including observing, exploring, asking questions and defining problems, planning and carrying out investigations, collecting data, analyzing and interpreting data, and constructing explanations and designing solutions.
  2. Provide multiple sensory and exploratory opportunities so that children discover properties and phenomena and later, that they can make things happen and solve simple problems.
  3. Identify age-appropriate elements of scientific and engineering practices, including identifying patterns, exploring cause and effect relations, examining the structure and function of objects (both natural and human made), using materials to solve problems, developing and using models, and engaging in argument from evidence.
S.3. Engaging Children in Developing and Using Disciplinary Core Ideas (D C Eyes)

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Demonstrate an understanding of and articulate the importance of life, earth, and physical science disciplinary core ideas of the Early Childhood Standards of Quality for Prekindergarten, and Kindergarten Michigan Science Standards.
  2. Identify age-appropriate elements of the disciplinary core ideas within instructional materials.
  3. Create experiences for children to use disciplinary core ideas within life, earth, and physical science and engineering.
S.4. Engaging Children in Developing and Using Crosscutting Concepts

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Articulate the nature of the crosscutting concepts and relate them to 3D and sensory learning (giving priority to patterns, cause and effect, and structure and function of systems and systems models) and identify them within the environment and instructional materials.
  2. Identify age-appropriate elements of the crosscutting concepts within instructional materials.
  3. Create experiences for children to use and integrate crosscutting concepts.
Children's Sense-Making and Science Teaching Pedagogy
S.5. Selecting and Modifying Instructional Materials for 3D Learning

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Select and modify instructional and sensory materials to create learning environments that engage children in using the disciplinary core ideas and science and engineering practices to explore, describe, test, experience, and explain phenomena.
  2. Articulate and incorporate connections between science and other discipline areas (e.g., engagement in measurement, analysis and the crosscutting concept of patterns within science learning; writing to explain science understanding).
Children's Sense-Making and Science Teaching Pedagogy
S.6. Children's Scientific Sense-Making

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Articulate how children make sense of scientific phenomena, ideas, experiences, and data and what scientific sense-making looks like in individuals (e.g., speaking, writing, visually representing, enacting, responding nonverbally) and group interactions (e.g., speaking and listening, responding nonverbally).
  2. Identify instances of sense-making and elicit children's ideas and responses, in individual, small group, and/or whole group interactions that embrace the complexity and iterative nature of responding to sensory experiences and sense-making.
  3. Respond to children's experiences and inquiry in ways that promote concept development and further inquiry. This means moving beyond indicating whether the ideas are correct vs. incorrect, accurate vs. misconceptions (e.g., providing words to describe children's responses to science and sensory experiences and materials, asking questions that guide children toward deeper understanding vs. a correct answer).
Children's Sense-Making and Science Teaching Pedagogy
S.7. Pedagogical Strategies that Support Culturally Relevant Sense-Making in 3D Learning

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Articulate research-based pedagogical strategies that support children's sense-making in age and culturally appropriate ways including leveraging children's prior experiences and knowledge, varying activity structures, nonverbal interactions and talk and group work for science. For example, teachers should be expected to describe children's responses, elicit children's thinking, cultural and community connections, and curiosity when making sense of phenomena.
  2. Choose, modify, and/or design learning experiences and/or assessments to create environments that provide opportunities for iterative children's responses, sense-making, and explanation building through adult-child interactions, classroom talk, written words, diagrams, and/or movement.
  3. Create an inclusive linguistic culture that leverages nonverbal communication, individual interactions, small group work, and whole group talk strategies for eliciting children's ideas and engaging children in sense-making through 3D learning (e.g., supplying words for children's nonverbal responses, partner talk, asking for clarification, asking for evidence and reasoning, asking for others to agree/disagree, asking for contributions to build on one another).
  4. Demonstrate initial strategies for navigating tensions between alternative ideas and ways of knowing (which may be derived from various cultures) and canonical science ideas including: referring to evidence, continuing to consider/debate to work through the ideas, focusing on the most important disciplinary/explanatory ideas, and understanding when it is appropriate and necessary to create space for children to grapple with alternative ideas.
  5. Select or modify formative and summative science assessments (e.g., diagrammatic, linguistic) that address 3D learning and reveal children's current sense-making.
  6. Recognize and assess children's ideas, life experiences and learning beyond the technical scientific language by evaluating samples of children's work and classroom interactions to determine the nature and depth of children's responses and sense-making and leverage ongoing changes in children's learning to adjust instruction and interaction strategies.
Children's Sense-Making and Science Teaching Pedagogy
S.8. Equity and Access

Well-prepared beginning teachers are able to:

  1. Identify children's and communities' interests, experiences, and resources as assets to their science learning and use these assets to select materials, sensory experiences, phenomenon, and modify or design learning experiences and interaction strategies.
  2. Develop strategies for creating a classroom culture that values extended exploration, discoveries, sensory experiences, productive struggle, challenging science ideas, constructing science meaning together, inclusiveness, and enjoying science.

 

Social Studies

SS.1. Civic Engagement

Children study their social world from the moment of birth. A strong identity is developed through multiple positive images and experiences with adults who are able to meet each child where they are in development and scaffold growth. From birth establishing close and stable relationships with caregivers lays a foundation for how children explore, perceive, and interpret the world. By the time they are three, four, and five years old, children are becoming increasingly sophisticated in observing and understanding their social world. The early childhood classroom is a perfect laboratory for children to further learn the knowledge, skills, and attitudes required to live in a diverse democratic society and to be able to understand our growing global interdependence as adults. The foundations of these skills include developing a strong identity, positive relationships with caregivers and peers, sense of belonging, emotional development, sense of contribution and community, skills for establishing strong relationships through culturally responsive learning opportunities, and nonŽviolent approaches to problem-solving.

Well-prepared teachers demonstrate knowledge that infants, toddlers, and children are individuals with their own thoughts, ideas, goals, needs, and feelings. The development of a strong individual, family, and community identity is critical to children's social well-being and influences children's cognitive development across content domains necessary for success in school and life.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Create environments that support children to explore their individual interests, goals, needs, and preferences.
  2. Use a developmental approach to support children in demonstrating an increased understanding of socially acceptable behavior.
  3. Use a developmental approach to support children in increasing awareness of themselves as members of a group.
  4. Create environments for children to develop mutual understanding and respect for diverse others.
  5. Provide a variety of materials/tools for children to observe themselves (e.g., mirrors, photographs) and to create images/representations of themselves, their families, and their world.
  6. Use language that helps children to describe themselves using factual information including what changes and what does not (e.g., recognize and label body parts, emotions, preferences).
  7. Use behavioral reflections to describe children's behaviors objectively (e.g., you are working together to fill the bucket).
  8. Create learning experiences, including through play, for children to develop personal self-control, self-motivation, and self-esteem.
SS.2. Relationships

Well-prepared teachers will demonstrate knowledge that children develop relationships through respectful, nurturing interaction with others, and that infants develop a sense of security and trust enabling them to explore their world and develop a sense of identity. In the earliest months of the child's life, this happens through a strong and trusting relationship with the primary caregiver. As these relationships continue and development progresses, toddlers will learn to take another's point of view, to empathize with others, to ask for help, to see themselves as a help for others, and to discuss or explain their ideas to adults or to other children. As a result of their contributions in the home environment, with peers, the program, and the community, children develop understanding and awareness of others, positive and accepting attitudes, and the ability to exhibit caring, cooperation, honesty, pride, and independence.

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Articulate that teachers play a significant role in helping children to initiate and maintain relationships with peers and adults and establish positive relationships with all children and families they serve.
  2. Support children in demonstrating an increased ability to communicate about and seek help for interpersonal conflict.
  3. Support children in demonstrating an increased ability to make intentional choices.
  4. Encourage children to communicate with peers (e.g., recognize peers exist, pay attention/listen to others, facilitate opportunities for peer to peer interactions and communication, peer to peer negotiations).
  5. Provide and facilitate opportunities to develop skills for understanding multiple perspectives.
  6. Engage children in learning about and using helping and friendly behaviors and positive social skills and facilitate these interactions among children.
  7. Demonstrate use of individual and group guidance and problem-solving techniques to develop positive and supportive relationships with children.
  8. Guide and facilitate positive, non-violent strategies of conflict resolution that result in win-win solutions.
  9. Provide multiple opportunities to develop communication skills to first communicate goals/needs, identify a problem, create a plan, negotiate with adults and peers using evidence/observation, then to generate a reasoned position on a public (i.e., classroom) issue in order to act constructively to further the public (i.e., classroom/family) good.
  10. Facilitate peer to peer social conversations during routine (i.e., mealtime) and play experiences.
  11. Foster emerging caring and cooperation skills among children and encourage developmentally appropriate reciprocal interactions where children take the perspective of others and discuss and explain their ideas to peers and adults.
  12. Create environments that expect respectful behaviors from peers and other adults; provide guidance for children to be respectful and tolerant themselves.
SS.3. History

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Provide intentional experiences for children to develop a sense of time and chronology using events from personal experiences and expanding into the events of the program, the family and larger communities as appropriate for the developmental level (e.g., past, present, future/yesterday, today, tomorrow, before/after, now/later; when/where/with whom, order and sequence of events, seasons).
  2. Provide intentional experiences involving change and continuity over time, and make appropriate use of historical evidence (e.g., events from their own past experience) in helping children develop a beginning awareness of temporal concepts and answering questions and developing arguments about past, present, and future events (e.g., recalling past events to problem solve a given situation, classroom projects that incorporate individual family stories or photographs of elders or family traditions, opportunities to track the passage of time through the construction of timelines of events of significance to them [e.g., daily schedule], their communities, and earlier times communicate regularly with families and invite multigenerational participation).
  3. Design environments that promote the development of sense of time and chronology with predictable but flexible routines, schedules, and activities. Infants develop this through environments that provide individualized care routines and toddlers, preschoolers, and kindergarteners through opportunities for children to use visual schedules/graphic organizers (e.g., steps for handwashing).
  4. Design experiences for children to recognize and respect historical concepts that vary across cultures (i.e., personal space, touch, time concepts, mealtime); take such into consideration when working with families; for example, visibly connect the curriculum to the families and cultures represented in the classroom; provide opportunities to hear from community members as storytellers or historians for the various cultures (including family members) and development of the area or region.
  5. Critically analyze language and visual representations in print and digital texts and media to avoid those which perpetuate gender, age, ability, family structure, social class, and racial/ethnic stereotypes.
  6. Use the Early Childhood Standards of Quality for Infant and Toddler Programs, Michigan Kindergarten content standards for social studies and Early Childhood Standards of Quality for Prekindergarten to plan appropriate experience.
SS.4. Geography

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Demonstrate the ability to support children to develop an awareness of landmarks and familiar places.
  2. Demonstrate the ability to support children to describe the characteristics of home to gain understanding of physical features (e.g., exterior type, door color, type of home, etc.).
  3. Use geographic concepts to develop learning experiences that enable children to identify and interpret environments using representational tools, spatial perspective, and concepts. Encourage children to apply skills in asking and answering questions, and creating geographic representations that explain human needs and wants and their relationship to their environment (e.g., developing an awareness of body in space, teachers that respond in predictable ways to needs/wants, helping children describe their needs and wants, provide opportunities for children to be involved in drawing a picture of a house as shelter).
  4. Provide access to high quality literature, both fiction and nonfiction, that helps children learn more about their place in their neighborhood and their expanding "community," both the structures as well as the outdoor play spaces and the plants and surrounding lands, forests, streams, and bodies of water.
  5. Arrange the environments—indoors and outside—to support and encourage self-motivated exploration and curiosity about people and places around the world; encourage children to see themselves as explorers.
SS.5. Civics and Government

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Demonstrate knowledge that governments apply civic virtues and principles of American constitutional democracy, explaining important rights and how, when, and where American citizens demonstrate their responsibilities by participating in government; demonstrate knowledge of Michigan K-3 content standards for social studies and Early Childhood Standards of Quality for Prekindergarten.
  2. Demonstrate the ability to support children in increasing their understanding of who works in the community and what they do.
  3. Assist children in developing rules and creating a democratic group setting (i.e., articulating/discovering with children why we have rules within family, school, and community) and how the rules apply to themselves and others. Create learning experiences to help children learn basic safety and health rules that they use daily.
  4. Provide democratic experiences such as voting, discussing the rights and responsibilities of being a member of a community.
  5. Promote children's developing sense of what it means to be a democratic community of learners and create such an environment within the classroom in which children have a chance to be heard, to respectfully express their own voices, and to participate.
  6. Provide diverse experiences for children to acknowledge and respond to others' thinking and behavior.
  7. Provide experiences for children to demonstrate care of the environment is our collective responsibility (e.g., caring for learning materials).
  8. Plan and implement opportunities to participate in community projects that are collaborative and help to establish a sense of place.
SS.6. Economics

Well-prepared beginning teachers will:

  1. Provide experiences for children to demonstrate an increased ability to make intentional choices.
  2. Provide experiences involving the interaction of individual needs, wants, goods, and services, and how these basic economic concepts relate to children's lives. (e.g., how to share resources, fair trading, play experiences that allow for "buying, selling, trading" goods or services; or saving by various means as a classroom project to reach a goal).
  3. Provide experiences involving concepts of fairness and equity (i.e., problem-solving solutions regarding shared spaces and shared materials).
  4. Plan and implement opportunities for children to exchange goods and services and develop an awareness that goods and services have value, and that value is influenced by many characteristics including availability, quality, personal need/goal, and the same good/service may have different value to different people (e.g., trading, identifying preferences, negotiation for toys, playing store).
  5. Plan and implement experiences for children to pay for things with the representation of money and provide opportunities for children to engage in play that includes the buying, selling, and trading of goods or services using representations of money.

footnote 1 MTTC Standards for the Preparation of Teachers of Early Childhood General and Special Education (Birth-Kindergarten) link opens in a new window