SUMMER 2009Drew Smith
Head of School
Last week our school community was treated to a first: a kindergarten play! Not just any play, but one performed on our stage in the Big Exciting Space, with sets and costumes, and music playing through the sound system. And the next day, students and teachers even had their own cast party.
Written by Teacher Leslie Grill, the play was officially titled, we love our world, we love our friends, but we need we to be. Students as clouds, the sun and stars, trees and flowers, birds and bees, the moon and a howling dog. Those of us in the audience marveled at our young actors ability to memorize their lines, both spoken and sung. Although the level of nerves varied, the play came off without a hitch.
Traditionally, kindergarten is the year when children begin to make monumental leaps in their ability to care for others, to empathize, and to complete formal work projects with one or more of their classmates. They learn about taking turns, sharing, and waiting to begin what might be a favorite activity. As kids grow, their community expands beyond their friends and classmates to ultimately include people whom students only know about through their reading. Empathy and sharing can eventually, in other words, include the world.
For these kindergarten students, we need we allowed them to act out one of the most important testimonies of Friends: stewardship. As a pretend ecosystem, each kindergarten actor made clear to the audience that the systemthe communityneeded all of its components to provide something necessary to the others, in ways direct and indirect. It was particularly touching to see the clouds bend closer to the flowers on stage in order that the rain would have a better chance at soaking the soil. The flowers, in turn, moved closer to the bees to facilitate make-believe pollination.
I discovered afterwards that these moments were instinctive amongst the kids, not suggested by the teacher directors. Our students seem to be learning their lessons well!
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Last modified: Saturday, May 30, 2009 at 08:34 PM