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Stronger Together:

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Writes every day in her book.' 'She's fine,' the neighbor said. ... and their granddaughter, holding the book, stood quite still in the warm garden. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Stronger Together:


1
  • Stronger Together
  • Creating a Path for Our Children, One Step at a
    Time

Lee Klinger Lesser, Project Training Manager
2
Caminante, no hay camino.Se hace camino al
andar. Antonio MachadoTraveler,
there are no roads.You make the road with every
step you take.
3
  • Open roads represent so much possibility and
    mysteryWe dont know what will happen. As
    educators and caregivers we can make a huge
    difference in the lives of children and families
    through the steps we take each day to create
    authentic relationships.

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Strengthening Families, Strengthening Children
  • Our children rely on us to keep them safe and
    help them flourish. As teachers and caregivers
    we are entrusted with an awesome responsibility
    and opportunity to make a difference in the life
    of a child and in the lives that that child will
    also touch throughout their lives. Partnering
    with families and helping to support and
    strengthen the childs family is one of the
    greatest gifts that we can provide. We are
    indeed stronger together and we do create a path
    for our children one step at a time.

6
How often is our relationship with families like
those of a wrestler?
7
Recognizing Strengths and Building Connections
  • In any relationship there is always mutual
    exchange and learning. And there will also be
    differences. When we see and honor the needs in
    each other, it will help us to make connections
    and partner to create change. It starts with
    recognizing strengths and building connections.
    These are two fundamental foundations of working
    with families. It may not be easy, predictable
    or stable all the time. Relationships change and
    grow. Yet if we can do this, it will lead to
    very different results.

8
Finding more balance
9
Promise and hope
  • When we begin to see and build on the strengths
    that are there and have new confidence in
    ourselves and families, we will find more and
    more balance.
  • Our world is filled with challenges and
    difficulties and at the same time, it is filled
    with promise and hope.

10
Following the natural urge to explore and connect
11
Fear is the cheapest room in the house. Id like
to see you in better living conditions.
  • Children follow their own innate curiosity and
    reach out to meet the world around them. We work
    with families that come from so many backgrounds,
    cultures and different family structures. Part of
    our work as educators and caregivers is to build
    bridges between differences, and to help children
    grow up in connection rather than separation
    based on fear or bias. It is the natural way of
    children unless they are taught something
    different.
  • We do not get to choose who a childs family is.
    It is not up to us to approve or disapprove of a
    family, but to do our best to help each child
    flourish within the context of their own family.
    The NAEYC Code of Ethical Conduct reminds us of
    this and also states that the most important
    principle in the entire code of ethics is Do no
    Harmif we do not appreciate, recognize and
    value a childs family, we are indeed creating
    harm, as childrens self-esteem and identity is
    so linked to their families.

12
Butterflies by Patricia Grace (from Electric
City, Penguin 1987)
13
  • The grandmother plaited her granddaughters hair
    and then she said, Get your lunch. Put it in
    your bag. Get your apple. You come straight
    back after school, straight home here. Listen to
    the teacher, she said. Do what she say.
  • Her grandfather was out on the step. He walked
    down the path with her and out on to the
    footpath. He said to a neighbor, our
    granddaughter goes to school. She lives with us
    now.
  • Shes fine, the neighbor said. Shes terrific
    with her two plaits in her hair.
  • And clever, the grandfather said. Writes
    every day in her book.
  • Shes fine, the neighbor said.
  • The grandfather waited with his granddaughter by
    the crossing and then he said, Go to school.
    Listen to the teacher. Do what she say. You
    bring your book home? the grandmother asked.
  • Yes.
  • You write your story.
  • Yes.
  • Whats your story?
  • About the butterflies.
  • Get your book, then. Read your story.

14
  • The grandmother and grandfather were quiet for a
    long time and their granddaughter, holding the
    book, stood quite still in the warm garden.
  • The granddaughter took her book from her
    schoolbag and opened it.
  • I killed all the butterflies, she read. This
    is me and this is all the butterflies.
  • And your teacher like your story, did she?
  • I dont know.
  • When the granddaughter came home from school her
    grandfather was hoeing round the cabbages. Her
    grandmother was picking beans. They stopped
    their work.
  • What your teacher say?
  • She said butterflies are beautiful creatures.
    They hatch out and fly in the sun. The
    butterflies visit all the pretty flowers, she
    said. They lay their eggs and then they die.
    You dont kill butterflies, that what she said.
  • The grandmother and grandfather were quiet for a
    long time and their granddaughter, holding the
    book, stood quite still in the warm garden.
  • Because you see, the grandfather said, your
    teacher, she buy all her cabbages from the
    supermarket and thats why.

15
The importance of partnership and relationship
  • In what ways are we like this teacher, not
    understanding a family or directly or indirectly
    contradicting a families values? Most of us
    operate from our own mindset or life experience
    and sometimes in the process we disrespect
    someone elses, and leave a child standing there
    in the midst of contradiction and confusion.
    Listen to what the teacher says Yet what do
    you do when what the teacher says is the opposite
    of what your family says?
  • The antidote to this is partnership and
    relationship. So that even when we come from
    different points of view or perspectives, we are
    speaking with each other and working together.so
    we dont harm or drop a child and leave a child
    feeling bad about themselves or about their
    families.

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17
The Blind Men and The Elephant
  • The blind men and the elephant is a legend that
    appears in different cultures - notably China,
    Africa and India - and the tale dates back
    thousands of years. Some versions of the story
    feature three blind men, others five or six, but
    the message is always the same. Heres a story of
    the six blind men and the elephant
  • Six blind men were discussing exactly what they
    believed an elephant to be, since each had heard
    how strange the creature was, yet none had ever
    seen one before. So the blind men agreed to find
    an elephant and discover what the animal was
    really like.

18
  • It didnt take the blind men long to find an
    elephant at a nearby market. The first blind man
    approached the beast and felt the animals firm
    flat side. It seems to me that the elephant is
    just like a wall, he said to his friends.
  • The second blind man reached out and touched one
    of the elephants tusks. No, this is round and
    smooth and sharp - the elephant is like a spear.
  • Intrigued, the third blind man stepped up to the
    elephant and touched its trunk. Well, I cant
    agree with either of you I feel a squirming
    writhing thing - surely the elephant is just like
    a snake.
  • The fourth blind man was of course by now quite
    puzzled. So he reached out, and felt the
    elephants leg. You are all talking complete
    nonsense, he said, because clearly the elephant
    is just like a tree.

19
  • Utterly confused, the fifth blind man stepped
    forward and grabbed one of the elephants ears.
    You must all be mad - an elephant is exactly
    like a fan.
  • Duly, the sixth man approached, and, holding the
    beasts tail, disagreed again. Its nothing like
    any of your descriptions - the elephant is just
    like a rope.
  • And all six blind men continued to argue, based
    on their own particular experiences, as to what
    they thought an elephant was like. It was an
    argument that they were never able to resolve.
    Each of them was concerned only with their own
    idea. None of them had the full picture, and none
    could see any of the others point of view. Each
    man saw the elephant as something quite
    different, and while in part each blind man was
    right, none was wholly correct.

20
Working together to discover the real
elephant...
  • So how often are we like the blind men arguing
    about whether a child or a family is like a rope,
    or a fan or a wall and only seeing one part of
    the picture ? In the process of insisting that
    our perspective is THE truth, we end up dropping
    the child in the midst of our own narrow-sighted
    view. On the other hand, if we each feel
    different real things, and talk together in
    relationship we will have a much clearer
    perspective of the elephant and the actions we
    take will be more real and relevant.

21
Who takes the child by the hand, takes the
family by the heart. Danish proverb
22
  • Be confident that you can make a difference.
    Dont get overwhelmed. Try to take each day and
    each task as they come, breaking them down into
    manageable pieces for action while struggling to
    see the whole. And dont think you have to win
    immediately or even at all to make a
    difference.
  • Marian Wright Edelman, Childrens Defense Fund

23
I slept and dreamed that life was joy. I awoke
and found that life was but service. I served and
discovered that service was joy. Rabindranath
Tagore
24
Building relationships with families
  • As early childhood educators we live in a social
    system that can be overwhelming. There are more
    and more demands on our time and record keeping
    and requirements. Often, we feel overwhelmed and
    we drop any effort to work with families. It is
    too much to handle.and yet when we really engage
    with families, there is a joy and energy that
    grow and that sustains us, even through
    difficulty. So here are some tips for building
    relationships with families.

25
Tips for Building Relationships with Families
  • Learn the names of family members!

26
Tips for Building Relationships with Families
  • Ask the story of where a childs name comes from.

27
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28
Tips for Building Relationships with Families
  • Take time to connect with families at drop-off
    and pick-up.

29
Tips for Building Relationships with Families
  • Learn about the cultures and values of families.

30
Tips for Building Relationships with Families
  • Build on strengths.

31
Tips for Building Relationships with Families
  • Take small steps and
  • let them lead you to
  • new ones.

32
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33
Tips for Building Relationships with Families
  • Find the joy in the deep intention of building
    relationships.

34
Tips for Building Relationships with Families
  • Recognize and find the support you need to do
    this work.

35
Tips for Building Relationships with Families
  • Learn the names of family members!
  • Ask the story of where a childs name comes from.
  • Take time to connect with families at drop-off
    and pick-up.
  • Learn about the cultures and values of families.
  • Build on strengths.
  • Take small steps and let them lead you to new
    ones.
  • Find the joy in the deep intention of building
    relationships.
  • Recognize and find the support you need to do
    this work.

36
  • We must recreate an attractive and caring
    attitude in our homes and in our worlds. If our
    children are to approve of themselves, they must
    see that we approve of ourselves.
  • Maya Angelou

37
  • Becoming aware of yourself and the impact you
    have on the world is not an easy task. It is not
    for the faint of heart or the weak in mind. It
    requires the same kind of determination I imagine
    most Olympic distance runners must have. You must
    be willing to listen, to keep plugging away,
    learning to accept, understand and love yourself
    exactly as you are, coming from where you have
    been.
  • Iyanla Vanzant

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39
  • If you think you are too small to be effective,
    you have never been in bed with a mosquito.
  • Bette Reese

40
Quetzal Bird
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A story from the Aztec People of Mexico
  • It is said by our Grandparents that a long time
    ago there was a great fire in the forests that
    covered our Earth. People and animals started to
    run trying to escape from the fire. Our brother
    owl, Tecolotl, was running away also when he
    noticed a small bird hurrying back and forth
    between the nearest river and the fire. He headed
    towards this small bird.
  • He noticed that it was our brother the Quetzal
    bird running to the river, picking up small drops
    of water in his beak, then returning to the fire
    to throw that tiny bit of water on the flame.
    Owl approached Quetzal bird and yelled at him
    What are you doing brother? Are you stupid? You
    are not going to achieve anything like this.
    What are you trying to do? You must run for your
    life!
  • Quetzal bird stopped for a moment and looked at
    owl, and then answered I am doing the best I
    can with what I have.
  • It is remembered by our Grandparents that a long
    time ago the forests that covered our Earth were
    saved from a great fire by a small Quetzal bird,
    an owl, and many other animals and people who got
    together to put out the flames.

43
So with the power of a mosquito, and the
determination of a tiny little bird, who joined
together with others, we can also create change
in our communities and face the huge fires that
surround us. When we families and caregivers work
together for children, we are all strengthened.
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