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    Joined: Jan 2010
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    Originally Posted by Emigee
    In terms of preschools, are there any Reggio Emilia based ones on your area? That has been tremendously successful for my son. It's an "emergent curriculum," which means the teachers respond to questions and interests from the group of children in designing the day to day activities.

    I'd like to ditto the endorsement of Reggio Emilia. Our twins, now 17yo, went to an RE preschool for several years and it worked really well for them. There was really no formal academic curriculum, but art and music were regular parts of the schedule, led by awesome specialists. When the class did group projects, they would divide up the "work" among the students, which allowed for the most natural and seamless differentiation I have ever seen. We ended up deciding to send them to the preschool one more year rather than pursue early admission to K (they missed the age cutoff by a couple of months).

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    Gentian Offline OP
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    Thank you Emigee and amylou, I'm looking into RE and am hopeful.

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    Originally Posted by Gentian
    She required constant holding, was a poor sleeper, was easily overstimulated, had sensory issues with certain qualities of sound, etc. She was usually early on her fine motor and cognitive milestones, but average to slow on her gross motor

    This is precisely how I'd describe my DD, now 3Y10M. She continues to sleep much lesser than her agemates, her sensory sensitivity has moved from when she cried incessantly to the sound of sneezing at 4 months, to now - where she smells even a slightest flavor in kitchen, says a staircase in a building smelt like "swimming pool" (they were cleaning with chlorinated water), closes ears when we turn on the blender but then asks Alexa (Amazon Echo) to play music at the insanely loud volume 10.

    Originally Posted by Gentian
    Fast forward to her second birthday, I was sitting home alone with her in my lap, drawing pictures for her, trying to teach her how to hold the stylus correctly, when she pointed to a scribble I'd made and said, "Two!". Well, there was a two of sorts in there, so on a whim I drew a one and she said, "One!" She then proceeded to reveal fluency in number and letter recognition

    So similar! DD could identify all alphabets by 14 months, and was able to speak all alphabets in sequence and number 1-20 in sequence by 17 months. She was speaking complete compound sentences by 21 months.

    Originally Posted by Gentian
    "The house is a rectangle!" (it is) or "My glass is a cylinder!" or "My pea is a sphere!" I


    DD is still fond of shapes. She has been so, since the time she started using a Shape sorter toy at 13 months and managed to sort most shapes correctly. A few months ago, she fell down and scraped her knee and was terribly upset that the scrape was a straight line and not a triangle. When I asked her how she fell down, she replied "Because I lost my center of gravity".

    Originally Posted by Gentian
    What prompted my post is a nightmare she had recently of she and I trapped in a fire "getting burned"...I hate the thought of her being so profoundly afraid so young.

    Another constant challenge. Earlier, around 3 years, she went through a fire-obsession stage. She constantly kept asking us questions like "what happens if we put paint on fire?" "what happens if we stand next to fire" "what happens if we poo on fire?" "what happens if we eat fire" "What happens if we touch the fire on the stove?" and went on to "what happens if we eat asteroid?" "what happens if the wax comes out of candle?" "what happens if we cut the sun?" She was so intensely curious that it was challenging to give her a logically satisfying answer and at the same time reiterate that "testing" by trying to touch fire is not a good idea.

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    Gentian Offline OP
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    Thanks for replying Kish. Our kids do sound alike. I'd forgotten the sneezing thing, that was a real problem for us too her first year. She seems to be over that, but the vaccuum still sends her into hiding in the other room until I'm done, and today she started crying anyway so I stopped and put it away.

    Her latest fear is, sadly enough, silence. She said she hears "bad noises" in it. So now we always have background music or talk radio or a cartoon going. I'm hoping she outgrows this one soon.

    It's nice to hear stories of similar children.






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